Lecture 11 Flashcards
What are the positives and negatives of FSIQ?
- represents child’s overall intellectual ability
- useful if you need to establish eligibility for services or highlight the basis of learning difficulties
BUT
- no info on relative strengths/weaknesses, which are vital to guide intervention
How do you report FSIQ and WISC-V results?
FSIQ 50-69: performing in extremely low range, consistent with mild degree of intellectual disability
FSIQ <50: performing in extremely low range, consistent with moderate degree of intellectual disability
- use ‘age-equivalent’ subtest scores to help parents/teachers understand child’s limitations (can help put into more concrete context)
What are the clinical considerations of using the WISC-V?
AGE OVERLAP - USE THE WISC?
- strengths and weaknesses at either end of age scale
- ‘systems’ requirements (eg. Education Department requirements for funding)
- child-specific issues
- re-assessment using intelligence scales over time (save older for later date)
- complex tasks > what specific skills does the child require to respond?
- ‘developmental context’ NOT ‘smooth’ process but jumps (eg. 7yrs don’t get similarities)
- if you expect hx of developmental delay or suspected ID start before starting point (give child sense of success before they start to fail)
- continue past discontinuation is you think it will give useful info about strengths/weaknesses
- note down all interesting observations
- look at process/error scores if you wish
- administration time: says 1 hr but will likely take longer in a clinical setting with a child
What are the 3 levels of the WISC-V test framework? How many subtests are they made up of?
- full scale > 7 subtests
- primary index scale (5) > 10 subtests
- ancillary index scale (5) > 6 secondary subtests
What are the 5 primary index scales in the WISC?
- verbal comprehension (vocab, similarities)
- visuo-spatial (block design, visual puzzles)
- fluid reasoning (matrix reasoning, figure weights)
- working memory (digit span, picture span)
- processing speed (coding, symbol search)
What are the 5 ancillary index scales in the WISC?
- quantitative reasoning
- auditory working memory
- non-verbal
- general ability
- cognitive proficiency
Why would you use the secondary subtests of the WISC?
- broader sample of intellectual functioning
- yield more info for clinical decision-making
- can substitute for primary in calculating FSIQ if one of them is missing or invalid