Lecture 12 Flashcards
1
Q
What are the 6 components of cognitive assessment?
A
- testing
- history
- report writing
- intervention
- feedback
- interpretation
2
Q
HISTORY
A
WHO
- the child
- family
- environment
- strengths/weaknesses
EARLY DEV HX
- pregnancy + delivery (FAS, low birth weight, cord around neck etc.)
- nutrition (in pregnancy + current)
- infant + toddler behaviour (eg. tantrums at age 8)
- sleep
- medical illness (recurrent ear infections > language)
- parent interaction (postnatal depression)
- social circumstances (SES > resources)
- toilet training (general development, marker of non-cognitive development)
- developmental milestones (parental concern)
- separation issues
- sensory deprivation
- transitions
OLDER DEV HX
- school life: academic progress, teacher interactions, performance under stress, adaptability to change
- social interaction: peer relations in and outside school (bullying, social media)
- extra-cirricular activities
- adolescent behaviour (risk-taking)
- interview parent and child separately
- ask about previous assessments
3
Q
TESTING: ENGAGING THE CHILD
A
- separation issues
- parent present during ax? (separation anxiety, language disorders)
- multiple sessions > think carefully about duration and timing of sessions
- demeanor: talking to children
- when to introduce ax + explaining ax to children, what ax to begin with (don’t start with something they struggle with)
- qualitative ax (drawing, play themes)
4
Q
ASSESSMENT considerations
A
- consider normal development (understand range of normal)
- use standardised measures
- cognitive constructs overlap
- tests inherently multi-factorial (eg. WM involves attention, memory and exec functioning)
- keep in mind the no. of diff cog/behav reason which a child may perform poorly on a test
- use hypothesis testing approach > sample key areas, IQ can help guide the rest of testing
- referral question
- primary or secondary deficits
- timing > are skills emerging or established at this age?
- context: opportunity to learn, family history
5
Q
8 component of cognitive assessment
A
- intelligence
- language
- visuo-spatial skills
- processing speed
- academic achievement
- exec function
- memory
- attention
6
Q
INTERPRETATION
A
- test scores + qualitative observations
- observations may help explain inconsistencies in test findings/performance
- avoid overstating sig. of a single test score (do other tests, explore this a little)
- KNOW YOUR NORMS
- identifying strengths is as important as weaknesses
- consider developmental context: need to understand critical periods in development, theoretical underpinnings, change over time (deficit v. delay; flow on effects from impairments)
7
Q
FEEDBACK
A
- vital > develop shared understanding of child with parents
- encourage 3-way communication, ask for each person’s view
- translate data into meaningful, clear, concise and practice recommendations
- being with child’s strengths (personal, psychosocial eg. fam/friends, environmental supports eg. school/community), followed by areas of concern
- very openly discuss IQ
- RECOMMENDATIONS for home, school, other situations
- give written report too as they won’t remember much of what you tell them
- finish on a positive!
8
Q
Cautionary Notes
A
- reliability of ax increase with age
- certain deficits may not be apparent in early childhood > follow high risk children, caution with providing feedback
- easier to determine deficits in skills that are established compared to those that are emerging/developing
9
Q
RECOMMENDATIONS
A
- ATTENTION: reduce distractions, focus on one aspect of task at a time, reduce amount of info, repeat info as necessary, take breaks
- MEMORY and NEW LEARNING: present info in meaningful contest, reduce volume + complexity + rate of presentation, support memory with repetition or memory aids
- EXECUTIVE SKILLS: routine!!!, allow extra time for complex activities, avoid multitasking, break complex tasks into stages, plan strategies and organise stage-by-stage to reduce WM load, encourage aides (eg. diary, phone)
10
Q
3 aspects of executive function?
A
- ATTENTIONAL CONTROL: selective attn., self-regulation, inhibition, processing speed
- COG FLEXIBILITY: shifting attn., divided attn., WM, using feedback
- GOAL SETTING: initiative, reasoning ability, planning + organisation, strategic decision-making
11
Q
REPORT WRITING
A
- consider audience > balance writing for med staff and parents
- if for parents/school, ensure you communicate in lay terms
- INCLUDE: background (early dev., parent complaints), presentation (separation, anxiety, response to failure, intelligibility of language), list tests, findings, summary + recommendations
- in communicating findings, do NOT use test scores or names > range of impairment okay, but explain (eg. James had difficulties with a complex visuo-spatial problem-solving task NOT James scored 6 on Block Design)
12
Q
Executive Function and Developmental Stage
A
- PRESCHOOL: simple errands, perform simple tasks, inhibit unsafe behaviours
- KINDER-Y2: 2-3 step tasks, bring info to/from school, greater inhibitory control (put up hand and wait)
- Y3-5: increase independence, keep track of belongings, plan simple assignments, keep track of changes in schedule, save money for later goal, self-regulate temper
- Y6-8: help with chores, organise own books/homework, follow complex routines, plan/finish long-term projects, structure own time
- Y9+: manage multiple deadlines, more complex long-term goals (job aspiration), make good use of leisure time, inhibit reckless and dangerous behaviour
13
Q
What parent/teacher info may you get? What can this tell you?
A
- BRIEF
- BASC
- often different pattern at home than school (better with structure? overloaded at school?)