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Psychological Testing: Chapter 11: Preschool & Educational Assessment

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This flashcard set reviews key aspects of early childhood assessment and legislation related to children with disabilities. It covers the preschool period, important public laws mandating evaluation and services, and commonly used tools in preschool assessment such as checklists, rating scales, and psychological tests.

Preschool Period

First five years of life

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

Preschool Period

First five years of life

Public Law 94-142

Mandated the professional evaluation of children age 3 and older suspected of having physical or mental disabilities to determine their special edu...

PL 94-142/PL-99-457

Extended downward to birth the obligation of states toward children with disabilities; further mandated that beggining with school year 1990-1991, ...

PL 105-17

Intended to give greater attention to diversity issues, especially as a factor in evaluation and assignment of special services; also mandated that...

Tools of Preschool Assessment

Checklists & Rating Scales
Psychological Tests
Other Measures

Checklist

Questionnaire on which marks are made to indicate the absence or presence of a specified behavior, thought, event, or circumstance; can cover a wid...

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TermDefinition

Preschool Period

First five years of life

Public Law 94-142

Mandated the professional evaluation of children age 3 and older suspected of having physical or mental disabilities to determine their special educational needs; also provided federal funds to help states meet those needs

PL 94-142/PL-99-457

Extended downward to birth the obligation of states toward children with disabilities; further mandated that beggining with school year 1990-1991, all disabled children from ages 3 to 5 were to be provided with a free appropriate education

PL 105-17

Intended to give greater attention to diversity issues, especially as a factor in evaluation and assignment of special services; also mandated that infants and toddlers with disabilities must receive services in the home or in other natural settings and that such services were to be continued in preschool programs

Tools of Preschool Assessment

Checklists & Rating Scales
Psychological Tests
Other Measures

Checklist

Questionnaire on which marks are made to indicate the absence or presence of a specified behavior, thought, event, or circumstance; can cover a wide array of item content and still be relatively economical and quick to administer

Rating Scale

A form completed by an evaluator to make a judgment of relative standing with regard to a specified variable or list of variables

Most Commonly Used Checklists and Rating Scales for Children

Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist

Connors Rating Scales-Revised - for ADHD

Syndrome

Defined as a set of co-occuring emotional and behavioral problems

At Risk

Refers to children who have documented difficulties in one or more psychological, social, or academic areas and for whom intervention is or may be required

Psychological Tests for Children

WPPSI-III, SB5 and others

Value of Preschool Tests

Lies in their ability to help identify children who are in a very low range of functioning and in need of intervention

Other Measures for use with Preschoolers

Interviews
Case History Methods
Portfolio Evaluatoin
Role-play methods

Achievement Tests

Designed to measure accomplishment; may be standardized or not; vary widely with respect to psychometric soundness

Specific Learning Disability

Disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken, or written, which disorder may manifest itself in the imprefect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations


Achievement Batteries

subtests which cover a number of academic areas

Locator/Routing Tests

Pretests administered to determine the level of the actual test most appropriate for administration

Wechsler Individual Achievement Test-Second Edition (WIAT-II)

Features nine subtests that sample content in each of the seven areas listed in a past revision of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

Cooperative Achievement Test

Consists of a series of separate achievement test in areas as diverse as English, mathematics, literature, social studies, social science, and foreign languages

College Level Examination Program (CLEP)

based on the premise that knowledge may be obtained through independent study and sources other than formal schooling

Proficiency Examination Program

Another service designed to assess achievement and skills learned outside the classroom

Adult Basic Learning Examination (ABLE)

A test intended for use with examinees age 17 and older who have not completed eight years of formalized schooling

Curriculum Based Assessment (CBA)

Term used to refer to assessment of information acquired from teachings at school

Curriculum Based Measurement (CBM)

type of CBA, characterized by the use of standardized measurement procedures to derive local norms to be used in the evaluation of student performance on curriculum-based tasks

Types of Achievement Tests

Rote Based and Factual in Nature

| Conceptual in nature - must draw on and apply knowledge related to a particular concept

Aptitude (Prognostic Tests)

Used to make predictions; used to measure readiness for elementary school, complete a challenging course of study in secondary school; successfully complete college-level work; successfully complete graduate-level work

Readiness Test

Primary purpose of the tests is to assess a child's readiness for learning

Metropolitan Readiness Tests (MRT)

Group-Administered battery that assesses the development of the reading and mathematics skills impotant in the early stages of formal school learning

Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)


A number of tests that consist of SAT Reasoning Test & SAT subject tests; serve as a gatekeeping function


ACT Assessment

Curriculum based with questions directly based on typical high-school subject areas

Graduate Record Examinations (GRE)

Long-standing rite of passage for students seeking admission to graduate school; has a General Test form as well as analytical and writing sections

Miller Analogies Test (MAT)

100-item, multiple-choice analogy test that draws not only on the examinee's ability to perceive relationships, but also on general intelligence, vocabulary, and academic learning

Seahorse Measure of Musical Talents

Now-classic measure of musical aptitude administered with the aid of a record or prerecorded tape

Milton Budoff

Explored differences between deficits identified by standardized tests that seemed to be due to differences in education versus mental deficiency; determining whether training could improve test performance

Reuven Feuerstein

Focused on the extent to which teaching of principles and strategies (mediated learning) modified cognition; developed the Learning Potential Assessment Device

Learning Potential Assessment Device (LPAD)

Designed to yield information about the nature and amount of intervention required to enhance a child's performance

Lev Vygotsky

Introduced the concept of a zone of proximal development


Zone of Proximal Development

Distance between the actual developmental level as determined by individual problem solving, and the level of potential development as determined through problem-solving under adult guidance or in collaboration with more capable peers

Zone

Area between a testtaker's ability as measured by a formal test and what might be possible with instruction or guidance

Dynamic Assessment Procedures

Assessors when intervening, coaching or other guidance, are not neutral
Goal may be to do everything in their power to help the testtaker master material in preparation for retesting; Variations may be introduced by assessors to better understand or remediate the obstacles to learning

Evaluative Information

Typically applied to tests or test data that are used to make judgments (pass/fail, admit/reject decisions)

Diagnostic Information

Typically applied to tests or test data used to pinpoint a student's difficulty, usually for remedial purposes; do not necesaril provide information that will answer questions concerning why a learning difficulty exists

Reading Tests

Stanford Diagnostic Reading Test
Metropolitan Reading Instructional Tests
Diagnostic Reading Scales
Durrell Analysis of Reading Test

Woodcock Reading Mastery Tests-Revised (WRMT-R)

Suitable for children age 5 and older and adults to age 75 and beyond; includes Letter identification, word identification, word attaack, word comprehension, and passage comprehension; measures Basic Skills & Reading Comprehension

Math Tests

Stanford Diagnostic Mathematics Test
Metropolitan Mathematics Instructional Tests
Diagnostic Mathematics Inventory
KeyMath Revised: A Diagnostic Inventory of Essential Mathematics

Other Diagnostic Tests

Stanford Diagnostic Reading Test

| Stanford Diagnostic Mathematics Test

Psychoeducational Test Batteries

Test kits that generally contain two types of tests: those that measure abilities related to academic success and those that measure educational achievement in areas such as reading and arithmetic

Kaufman Asessment Battery for Children (K-ABC)

Designed for use with testtakers from age 2 1/2 through age 12 1/2; subtests measuring both intelligence and achievement are included

Alexander Luria

Identified two kinds of information-processing skills: Simultaneous and Sequential

Sequential Learner

Solves problems best by mentally arranging small amounts of information in consecutive, linear, step-by-step order. He/she is most at home with verbal instructions and cues because the ability to interpret spoken language depends to a great extent on the sequence of words

Simultaneous Learner

Solves problems best by mentally integrating and synthesizing many parallel pieces of information at the same time. He/she is most at home with visual instructions and cues because the ability to interpret the environment visually depends on perceiving and integrating many details at once

Woodcock-Johnson III (WJ III)

Psychoeducational test package consisting of two co-normed batteries: Tests of Achievement and Tests of Cognitive Abilities based on the Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) Theory of Cognitive Abilities; yields a measure of general intellectual ability (g) as well as measures of specific cognitive abilities, achievement, scholastic aptitude, and oral language; used in conjunction with other assessment techniques

Other Tools of Assessment in Educational Settings

Performance, Portfolio and Authentic Assessment


Performance Assessment

Vaguely referred to any type of assessment that requires the examinee to do more than choose the correct response from a small group of alternatives; focuses on the knowledge, skills, and values that the examinee must marshal and exhibit

Performance Task

Work sample designed to elicit representative knowledge, skills, and values from a particular domain of study

Performance Assessment

Evaluation of performance tasks according to criteria developed by experts from the domain of study tapped by those tasks

Portfolio

Synonymous with work sample

Portfolio Assessment

Refers to the evaluation of one's work samples

Authentic Assessment

One name given to this trent toward more performance-based assessment; evaluation of relevant, meaningful tasks that may be conducted to evaluate learning of academic subject matter but that demonstrate the student's transfer of that study to real-world activities

Peer Appraisal Methods

Asking an individual's peer group to make the evaluation; provides information about behavior

Nominating Technique

Method of peer appraisal in which individuals are asked to select or nominate other individuals for various types of activities

Sociogram

Graphically illustrated peer appraisal; figures such as circles or squares are drawn to represent different individuals, and lines and arrows are drawn to indicate various types of interaction