Interpretation of the WISC-IV

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WMS-IV Wechsler Memory Scale - Fourth Edition
Advertisements

Scoring Terminology Used in Assessment in Special Education
HT820: Introduction to Psycho-Educational Assessment
Making the Switch: Unlocking the Mystery of the WISC-IV Shelley C. Heaton, Ph.D. Dept of Clinical & Health Psychology Case Conference July 24, 2004.
DETERMINING ELIGIBILITY IN MA EARLY INTERVENTION A General Overview to Scoring.
Linda S. Gottfredson University of Delaware Newark, DE Creativity on the Brain (and its psychometrics) Discussion of Rex E. Jung’s presentation, “Neuroimaging.
Scales of Measurement n Nominal classificationlabels mutually exclusive exhaustive different in kind, not degree.
Review: What influences confidence intervals?
PSY 307 – Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences
Probability & Using Frequency Distributions Chapters 1 & 6 Homework: Ch 1: 9-12 Ch 6: 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 14.
Sampling Distributions
Intro to Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences PSYC 1900 Lecture 9: Hypothesis Tests for Means: One Sample.
Inferences About Means of Single Samples Chapter 10 Homework: 1-6.
Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon Standardized Testing Chapter 14.
z-Scores What is a z-Score? How Are z-Scores Useful? Distributions of z-Scores Standard Normal Curve.
Reliability of Selection Measures. Reliability Defined The degree of dependability, consistency, or stability of scores on measures used in selection.
Classroom Assessment A Practical Guide for Educators by Craig A
Interpreting Psycho- Educational Reports An overview of the purposes and content of typical psycho-educational reports Dr John Worthington Educational.
The Wechsler Intelligence Scales
Measurement Concepts & Interpretation. Scores on tests can be interpreted: By comparing a client to a peer in the norm group to determine how different.
Measures of Central Tendency
The Data Analysis Plan. The Overall Data Analysis Plan Purpose: To tell a story. To construct a coherent narrative that explains findings, argues against.
Assessment of Mental Retardation & Giftedness: Two End of the Normal Curve Lecture 12/1/04.
Statistics Used In Special Education
Standardization the properties of objective tests.
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scales
Introduction to Testing Children and Administration of the WISC-IV November 3, 2004.
TM 1.
LECTURE 06B BEGINS HERE THIS IS WHERE MATERIAL FOR EXAM 3 BEGINS.
© 2006 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Numbers Numbers mean different things in different situations. Consider three answers that appear.
Chapter 11 Descriptive Statistics Gay, Mills, and Airasian
Miller Function & Participation Scales (M-FUN)
Points in Distributions n Up to now describing distributions n Comparing scores from different distributions l Need to make equivalent comparisons l z.
History of Stanford-Binet  Binet-Simon scale of  30 items designed to measure judgment, comprehension, and reasoning which Binet deemed the key.
COGNITIVE TESTING and THE IMPACT OF TESTING
Investigating the Relationship between Scores
Chapter 10: Analyzing Experimental Data Inferential statistics are used to determine whether the independent variable had an effect on the dependent variance.
1 Psych 5500/6500 The t Test for a Single Group Mean (Part 1): Two-tail Tests & Confidence Intervals Fall, 2008.
Chapter 3b (Normal Curves) When is a data point ( raw score) considered unusual?
The KOPPITZ-2 A revision of Dr. Elizabeth Koppitz’
Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Limited. 3-1 Chapter 3 Measures of Central Tendency and Dispersion.
Assessment What is it? Collection of relevant information for the purpose of making reliable curricular decisions and discriminations among students (Gallahue,
Chapter 2 ~~~~~ Standardized Assessment: Types, Scores, Reporting.
Z-Scores Standardized Scores. Standardizing scores With non-equivalent assessments it is not possible to develop additive summary statistics. –e.g., averaging.
Basic Statistical Terms: Statistics: refers to the sample A means by which a set of data may be described and interpreted in a meaningful way. A method.
U Describes the relationship between two or more variables. Describes the strength of the relationship in terms of a number from -1.0 to Describes.
TYPES OF SCORES (PP IN HUTCHINSON; MERRELL & PLANTE; SECOND PART OF HAYNES AND PINDZOLA )
Wechsler Scales. Security and Terms Test security Test security Terms Terms Floor Floor Ceiling Ceiling Basal and ceiling rules Basal and ceiling rules.
Assessing Learners with Special Needs: An Applied Approach, 6e © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 5: Introduction to Norm- Referenced.
Leiter International Performance Scale – Revised
Standardized Testing. Basic Terminology Evaluation: a judgment Measurement: a number Assessment: procedure to gather information.
Educational Research: Competencies for Analysis and Application, 9 th edition. Gay, Mills, & Airasian © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education The Statistical Imagination Chapter 5. Measuring Dispersion or Spread in a Distribution of Scores.
Scales of Measurement n Nominal classificationlabels mutually exclusive exhaustive different in kind, not degree.
Differential Ability Scales (DAS-II)
The Normal Distribution and Norm-Referenced Testing Norm-referenced tests compare students with their age or grade peers. Scores on these tests are compared.
AP Statistics Section 15 A. The Regression Model When a scatterplot shows a linear relationship between a quantitative explanatory variable x and a quantitative.
Hypothesis Testing and Statistical Significance
Educational Research Descriptive Statistics Chapter th edition Chapter th edition Gay and Airasian.
WISC-IV The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for children (WISC-IV) is a cognitive test for children aged 6 years to 16 years and 11 months. Test-retest validity.
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved Chapter 3 Investigating the Relationship of Scores.
A QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH PROJECT -
T-Tests and ANOVA I Class 15.
Different Types of Data
The Normal Curve and Sampling Error
Introductory Statistics
WISC IV has five main areas that are; Verbal Comprehension Index (VCI), Perceptual Reasoning Index (PRI), Working Memory Index (WMI), Processing Speed.
Interpreting the WAIS-IV
Woodcock Johnson Tests of Achievement - III
Intelligence Testing.
Presentation transcript:

Interpretation of the WISC-IV November 8 & 10, 2004

Intro to the WISC-IV Scoring Deviation IQ for 4 Index Scores and FSIQ: M = 100 SD = 15 Individual subtest standard scores: M = 10 SD = 3 Normative age group comparison IQs based on the 10 standard subtests IQ scores can range from 40-160 Cannot compute index or FSIQ scores if: 0 raw score on 2 of 3 VCI or PRI subtests 0 raw score on both WMI or PSI subtests

Subtest Substitution Substitution permitted if there is a clinical need. For example, when a child has poor fine motor skill: Substitute Cancellation for Coding Substitute Picture Completion for Block Design Substitution permitted if a subtest is spoiled due to administration error or environment interruption (e.g., fire drill). Only 1 substitution allowed for each index and only 2 for overall IQ.

Successive Level Approach to Test Interpretation Full Scale IQ Index Scores Subtest Deviations within Composites Intersubtest Score Comparisons Intrasubtest Score Comparisons Qualitative Analysis

IQ and Index Scores Calculate IQ and Index Scores 95% confidence intervals (Tables A.2-A.6) Percentile ranks (Tables A.2-A.6) Classification: Very Superior: > 130 Superior: 120-129 High Average: 110-119 Average: 90-109 Low Average: 80-89 Borderline: 70-79 Mild Mental Retardation: 55-69 Moderate Mental Retardation: 40-54

Are the Index Scores Interpretable? Is there abnormal scatter among the VCI subtests? 6 pts for 3 & 4 subtests; 7 points for 5 subtests Is there abnormal scatter among the PRI subtests? 7 points for 3 subtests; 8 points for 4 subtests If “yes,” index scores and discrepancy comparisons should be interpreted with caution.

Are the Index Scores Interpretable? (continued) Significant difference between WMI subtests (DS & LN)? 3 points is significant, rounded from Table B.3 in the manual 5 points is unusual & WMI is not interpretable Significant difference between PSI subtests (Coding and SS)? 4 points, rounded from Table B.3 in the manual 4 points if CD<SS; 5 points if CD>SS is unusual and PSI is not interpretable

Is there an unusual amount of scatter among the 10 subtests that comprise the FSIQ? Table B.6, p. 266

If there is an unusual amount of scatter, interpret the index scores instead of the FSIQ

Successive Level Approach to Test Interpretation Full Scale IQ Calculate IQ and confidence intervals. Index Scores Are the index scores interpretable? (scatter within an index) Is there unusual scatter across the 10 subtests? Comparison among the index scores Subtest Deviations within Composites Intersubtest Score Comparisons Intrasubtest Score Comparisons Qualitative Analysis

Comparison of Index Scores Are there any significant differences among index scores (Tables B-1 & B-2; Sattler A-2)? Are any differences considered unusual (i.e., occurred in less than 10% of standardization group). Significant differences can be described as more/less developed. Unusual differences can be described as a true strength of weakness.

Subtest Scores: Interindividual Comparisons Label Percent 1-4 Far below average Or very poor 1-2% 5-7 Below average or weakness 5-16% 8-12 Average 25-75% 13-15 Above average or strength 84-95% 16-19 Superior 98-99%

Test Age Equivalents Can calculate test age equivalents for each of the subtests (Table A.9). This is useful when you want an estimate of a child’s mental age. This is also useful when comparing across different tests that are not scaled equivalently.

Subtest Deviations within Index Composites: Intraindividual comparisons Calculate the overall mean of all subtests and subtract each subtest to define Ss and Ws If VCI and PRI are different, calculate VCI and PRI means and compare subtests scores to the appropriate means. Generate hypotheses based on Ss and Ws Use protocol chart and Jean’s ability chart.

Comparison of Subtest Scores: Intraindividual Comparisons Intersubtest variability (comparisons across subtests when scatter is greater than 5 points, Sattler p. 124-131; Sattler Table A-2 (breaks down by age; Manual B-3). Intrasubtest variability (comparison of scores within an individual subtest.

Cautions of Intraindividual Comparisons Avoid reporting that subtest scores of 8 or higher reflect a weakness. Avoid reporting that subtests scores of 7 or lower reflect a strength. See Sattler supplement p. 116 for examples of how to describe intraindividual comparisons.