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A Conversation About Intellectual Assessment: What Parents Need to Know (or: I.Q. numbers are bad until we need them) Pamela J. Ryan, M.A., CAGS Licensed.

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Presentation on theme: "A Conversation About Intellectual Assessment: What Parents Need to Know (or: I.Q. numbers are bad until we need them) Pamela J. Ryan, M.A., CAGS Licensed."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Conversation About Intellectual Assessment: What Parents Need to Know (or: I.Q. numbers are bad until we need them) Pamela J. Ryan, M.A., CAGS Licensed Educational Psychologist Perkins School for the Blind/Deafblind Program

2 Why are we gathered here? To raise awareness around issues related to intellectual assessment and IQ numbers; “IQ numbers are bad until we need them”; To share personal experiences working with families—what has been learned and why this topic needs to be addressed; Provide the parent perspective on this topic; Provide the perspective of the school psychologist whose job it is to provide information for program planning, transition planning, and as it relates to guardianship; Help parents better understand the federal mandates for the need for IQ testing v. more informal information gathering such as Person Centered Planning, Portfolio Assessments, Reach for the Stars, etc.

3 Some background…. My job: I am a School Psychologist…. That said, let’s talk about the... dun dun dunnnnn…..

4 …Words that can strike fear into the hearts of the hardiest of parents. The triennial evaluation is a part of all special education student’s lives. It is done for these reasons: To see if the child is a “child with a disability,” as defined by IDEA To gather information that will help determine the child’s educational needs To guide decision making about appropriate educational programming for the child. Formal testing is usually the goal of the triennial evaluation and done by your child’s team (i.e., OT, PT, SLP, Psych, Behavior, O+M): all the specialty services your child may get as part of his or her IEP. For our purposes here, we are talking specifically about the psychological evaluation part, done by the School Psychologist. The triennial evaluation (pretty much the reason for my job)

5 How does a triennial happen? (focusing on the School Psychologist’s part) Parent permission Team discussion re: questions/needs Identify specialists for evaluation areas Review of records Discussion with parents about the process Formal sessions with the student and using appropriate, formal materials Formal report with descriptions, recommendations Presentation of information to parents, Team

6 So, I am now going to focus on the materials and the outcomes, most specifically, the IQ score and how it can be helpful to us as your child nears 18 years old. Also, a delineation that you might not be aware of: Developmentally Delayed v. Intellectual Disability Developmentally Delayed: 0 to 9 years old Intellectual Disability: 9+

7 Typically Used Materials Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence-4 th Edition Wechsler Intelligence Sale for Children—4 th Edition Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale—4 th Edition Stanford-Binet 5 th Edition Woodcock-Johnson Test of Cognitive Abilities Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales;2 nd Edition

8 But wait….. We have tests, but these tests don’t include your children! These tests, the ones used by pretty much everyone, everywhere do not include children with more than one disability. The tests do make considerations for vision impairment OR hearing impairment OR motor interference, but not for hearing, vision, balance, communication, fatigue, low muscle tone. Not to mention other interfering issues such as OCD, anxiety, physical limitations (missing limbs, digits, scoliosis) that can hinder access, and cognitive delays. What’s a school psychologist to do?? Especially a school psychologist that has limited experience with our kinds of kids.

9 So, I.Q.:What is it and how do we find it? I.Q. is an abbreviation for the term, Intelligence Quotient. Over the years, the meaning has changed and more recently the work of Howard Gardner from Harvard University introduced the theory of multiple intelligences that sheds a broader lens on the idea of I.Q. Multiple intelligences are defined as: Spatial; Linguistic; Logical-mathematical; Bodily-kinesthetic; Musical; Interpersonal; Intrapersonal and Naturalistic. But the I.Q. itself is a number….a number that you may have as part of your child’s assessment. The number is what we talk about; the number is what we worry about and often, what we disagree with. In it’s simplest form, an IQ is a number from 0 to 200+ that rates a person’s cognitive ability in comparison to the general population.

10 Current Wechsler (WAIS–IV, WISC–IV, WPPSI– IV) IQ classification IQ Range IQ Classification 130 and above Very Superior 120–129 Superior 110–119 High Average 90–109 Average 80–89 Low Average 70–79 Borderline 69 and below Extremely Low

11 Stanford-Binet Fifth Edition (SB5) classification IQ Range IQ Classification 145–160 Very gifted or highly advanced 130–144 Gifted or very advanced 120–129 Superior 110–119 High average 90–109 Average 80–89 Low average 70–79 Borderline impaired or delayed 55–69 Mildly impaired or delayed 40–54 Moderately impaired or delayed

12 But those things---those numbers--- are not what you really want to hear about when your child’s triennial assessment is reported on at the IEP (or a separate meeting). You want to hear the things that make your child stand out and at the very least, you want to know that the evaluator KNOWS your child. You want to make sure the evaluator knows how to BE WITH your child to get the very best results. You want to know that the results will form a good picture of your child and that recommendations will be helpful for continued educational planning. You also want to know that things you know about your child are included and that his or her strengths, personality, interests, sense of humor, fears, joys are part of a complete package. You want someone to know that your child, while reading and math might not place him on an honor roll, his work ethic; his independence in his vocational training activities; his ability to make friends and be a friend; and his overall zest for life are shown and honored. When your child is younger, the need for this information is for current educational planning to further one’s goals and objectives as they move through curriculum and have access to learning THEIR way. As your young adult (now) is approaching 18, you want and need all of this information to be included and you want others to know it in preparation for applying for guardianship and including adult service agencies (for group living, for work, for recreation and leisure options) if those are part of your family’s goal for your child.

13 Alan S. Kaufman, a leading psychologist and researcher at Yale University wrote in the book, “Assessing Adolescent and Adult Intelligence” (2006): “IQ classifications from IQ testing are not the last word on how a test-taker will do in life, nor are they the only information to be considered for placement in school or job-training programs. There is a dearth of information about how behavior differs between persons with differing IQ scores. For placement in school programs, for medical diagnosis, and for career advising, factors other than IQ must also be a part of an individual assessment. The lesson here is that classification systems are necessarily arbitrary and change at the whim of test authors, government bodies, or professional organizations. They are statistical concepts and do not correspond in any real sense to the specific capabilities of any particular person with a given IQ. The classification systems provide descriptive labels that may be useful for communication purposes in a case report or conference, nothing more.” (Kaufman, Alan S.; Lechtenberger, Elizabeth O. (2006) Assessing Adolescent and Adult Intelligence (3 rd ed.). Hoboken (NJ); Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-73553-3)

14 In addition to the numbers…. “ factors other than IQ must also be a part of an individual assessment”. An IQ number alone is not an appropriate way to evaluate, and thus, categorize an individual. Under IDEA, “it is inappropriate and unacceptable to base any eligibility decision upon the results of only one procedure”.

15 Closing thoughts… Testing will be inevitable, so your child’s ENTIRE team should be working together to get the best overall picture for moving forward IQ scores will be inevitable as special needs students head toward 18 years old, most especially if adult service agencies will be involved. The IQ score can be our friend if we understand why it is being used and it will provide good outcomes for your children.

16 Resources CHARGE Syndrome, A Volume in the Genetics and Communication Disorders Series, Hartshorne, Hefner, Davenport, Thelin Plural Publishing, Inc. 2011 Parenting Perspectives…Ideas to help your child succeed; "Understanding Test Scores: A Handout for Parents" by Andrea Canter, (National Association of School Psychologists, 1998). Copyright © 2002 by The Source for Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. www.teachersandfamilies.com www.teachersandfamilies.com www.aidd.com www.wrightslaw.com http://thearc.gov http://idea.ed.gov

17 Resources, cont. Position Paper: Intelligence Testing of Individuals Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired, Stephen Goodman, Carol Evans, Marnee Loftin, 2011, American Printing House for the Blind May Awareness Theme: www.chargesyndrome.orgwww.chargesyndrome.org www.nichy.org: Evaluating Children for Disability www.nichy.org


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