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100+ Free PA Psych Juris Practice Questions

Pass your Pennsylvania Psychology Jurisprudence Examination exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.

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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: PA Psych Juris Exam

70%

Passing Score

PA Board requirement

30h/2yr

CE Required

Biennial renewal

3h Ethics

Ethics CE

Mandatory per period

Act 31

Child Abuse CE

2h mandated

PSYPACT

Telehealth Compact

Member state

The PA Psych Juris exam covers the Professional Psychologists Practice Act, Board rules, mandatory reporting (ChildLine), older adult protection, duty to warn, MHPA involuntary commitment procedures, 30 CE hours/2 years with 3 hours ethics and 2 hours child abuse (Act 31), PSYPACT telehealth compact, and APA Ethics Code standards.

About the PA Psych Juris Exam

The Pennsylvania Psychology Jurisprudence Examination tests knowledge of the Professional Psychologists Practice Act (63 P.S. § 1201 et seq.), Board regulations, Child Protective Services Law, Mental Health Procedures Act, duty to warn, confidentiality and privilege, supervision, telehealth including PSYPACT, and the APA Ethics Code as applied in the Commonwealth.

Questions

100 scored questions

Time Limit

2 hours

Passing Score

70%

Exam Fee

Varies (Pennsylvania State Board of Psychology)

PA Psych Juris Exam Content Outline

35%

Pennsylvania Practice Act & Board Regulations

Professional Psychologists Practice Act (63 P.S. § 1201 et seq.), licensing requirements, CE obligations including Act 31 child abuse training, BPOA structure

25%

Mandatory Reporting & Protective Services

Child abuse reporting via ChildLine, 48-hour written report rule, Older Adults Protective Services Act, reporter immunity

20%

Confidentiality, Privilege & Duty to Warn

Psychologist-client privilege, Mental Health Procedures Act, Section 302 involuntary examination, duty to warn identifiable victims

10%

Supervision & Telehealth

Postdoctoral supervision requirements, PSYPACT compact membership, telehealth standards, HIPAA compliance

10%

APA Ethics Code & Professional Conduct

Multiple relationships, competence boundaries, informed consent, record-keeping, forensic practice standards

How to Pass the PA Psych Juris Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 70%
  • Exam length: 100 questions
  • Time limit: 2 hours
  • Exam fee: Varies

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

PA Psych Juris Study Tips from Top Performers

1Study the Professional Psychologists Practice Act (63 P.S. § 1201 et seq.) and Board regulations thoroughly
2Know the ChildLine reporting number (1-800-932-0313) and the 48-hour written report requirement under the Child Protective Services Law
3Understand the Mental Health Procedures Act, particularly Section 302 involuntary examination procedures
4Review Act 31 of 2014 mandating 2 hours of child abuse CE and the total 30 CE hours per biennial renewal requirement
5Study PSYPACT provisions and how they affect interstate telepsychology practice in Pennsylvania

Frequently Asked Questions

What topics does the Pennsylvania psychology jurisprudence exam cover?

The PA psychology jurisprudence exam covers the Professional Psychologists Practice Act, Board regulations, mandatory reporting laws (child abuse via ChildLine, older adult abuse), the Mental Health Procedures Act, duty to warn, confidentiality and privilege, supervision requirements, telehealth and PSYPACT, and the APA Ethics Code.

How many CE hours does Pennsylvania require for psychologist license renewal?

Pennsylvania requires 30 CE hours per biennial renewal period. This must include at least 3 hours in ethics and at least 2 hours in child abuse recognition and reporting (mandated by Act 31 of 2014). Licenses expire November 30 of odd-numbered years.

Is Pennsylvania a PSYPACT member state for telepsychology?

Yes, Pennsylvania has adopted PSYPACT (Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact), allowing licensed psychologists from other compact states to provide telepsychology services to clients in Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania-licensed psychologists to practice in other compact states.

What is the mandatory reporting requirement for psychologists in Pennsylvania?

Pennsylvania psychologists are mandatory reporters of suspected child abuse under the Child Protective Services Law. Reports must be made immediately via ChildLine (1-800-932-0313) with a written follow-up report within 48 hours. Psychologists are also mandatory reporters under the Older Adults Protective Services Act for adults age 60+.