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The Clinician’s Toolbox II Assessment
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Reliability & Validity Tests must be valid and reliable to be useful Reliability Consistency with which individuals respond to test stimuli Several known ways to evaluate reliability Validity The extent to which an assessment measures what it is supposed to measure Several known forms of validity
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Reliability Test-retest reliability An index of the consistency of test scores across some period of time Equivalent forms reliability An index of the consistency of test scores across time without “practice effect” Split-half reliability Index of the internal consistency of the test Internal consistency Preferred index of internal consistency; all possible split-half correlations is computed Inter-rater or inter-judge reliability Index of degree of agreement between to or more raters or judges
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Validity Content validity The degree to which a group of test items actually covers the various aspects of the variable under study Predictive validity The degree to which test scores can predict (correlate with) behavior or test scores observed or obtained at some later point Concurrent validity The extent to which test scores are correlated with a related, but independent set of test scores or behaviors Construct validity The extent to which test scores are correlated with other measures or behaviors in a logical and theoretically consistent way Involves demonstrating both convergent and discriminant validity
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Cognitive Testing: An umbrella term General intelligence Neuropsychological functioning More specific cognitive skills Visual and motor memory Language skills Pattern recognition skills Finger dexterity Visual-perceptual skills Academic skills Motor functions
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Intelligence Testing First used to evaluate children to Help them maximize their educational experience Teacher’s develop appropriate curriculum with special needs Screen military recruits Still used for all of the above and Vocational planning Assessing learning disabilities Determining eligibility for gifted and specail ed programs Brain-behavior relationships and functional problems Overall cognitive strengths and limitations
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Intelligence Defined? What is intelligence? No single definition of intelligence that experts agree upon Influential theories Spearman Thurstone Cattell Guilford Piaget Sternberg Gardner Goleman
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Intelligence Measured Most popular and most frequently administered are the Wechsler Scales Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS III) WAIS-R as a Neuropsychological Instrument (WAIS-RNI) Wechsler Intelligence Scale of Children (WISC-IV) Wechsler Primary and Preschool Scale-Revised (WPPSI-R) Stanford-Binet V Kaufman Assessment Battery Woodcock-Johnson Psychoeducational Battery III
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Wechsler system Verbal subtests Information Similarities Arithmetic Vocabulary Comprehension Digit span Letter-number sequencing Performance subtests Picture arrangement Picture completion Block design Object assembly Matrix reasoning Digit symbol Symbol search
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Wechsler System Mean score of 100; SD of 10 (15 in WISC and WPPSI) 90-110 average range < 70 is in mentally deficient range > 130 is in the very superior range Individual tests have a mean score of 10; SD of 3 All form the basis for subtle observations about relative strengths and limitations Observe patterns of scores Interpreted in the context of other test results and variety of biopsychosocial factors
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Intelligence and Ethnicity Kaufman Assessment KABC; KAIT Sequential processing Simultaneous processing Mental processing composite Achievement Mean 100; SD 15 System of Multicultural Pluralistic Assessment (SOMPA) Especially designed for children from ethnic minority groups Nine different measures of cognitive functioning Includes a structured interview with parents
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Neuropsychological Testing Assess brain-behavior skills Abstract reasoning Memory Visual-perceptual Attention Concentration Gross and fine motor coordination Language functioning Halstead-Reitan & Luria-Nebraska 6-8 hours to administer
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Questions & Controversies Are we born with a certain IQ? 16-64% of the variance in intellectual ability is due to genetic influence (Hale, 1991; Sattler, 1988; 1992) Biopsychosocial influences associated with intelligence or at least IQ scores Are IQ scores stable? Very young; very long time – less stable Are IQ scores biased? Validity does not vary from group to group on Wechsler or Stanford-Binet; tests can be misused.
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Personality Tests Observe and describe the structure and content of personality – the characteristic ways an individual thinks, feels, behaves, and interacts Clarifies Diagnoses Problematic patterns of behavior Intra and interpersonal dynamics Treatment implications Can be objective or projective
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Measuring Personality & Psychological Functioning Objective testing Specific questions or statements to which the person responds by using specific, fixed answers or a rating scale Scores tabulated and compared to reference groups Projective testing Ambiguous or unstructured stimuli to which client is asked to respond freely. Unconscious or conscious needs, motives, interests, dynamics are projected onto ambiguous stimuli revealing internal dynamics or personality More challenging to score and interpret than objective
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Objective Tests Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI; MMPI-2) Millon Multi-Axial Inventory III (MCMI-III) 16 Personality Factors (16PF) NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI)
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Projective Tests Rorschach Inkblot Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) Projective Drawing Tests Draw-A-Person Draw-A-House Draw-A-Tree Draw-A-Family Sentence completion tests
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Questions & Controversies Are personality results assessed through testing stable? Person-situation interaction appears to be in play Are projective tests reliable and valid? When purpose is to know, understand, and describe. Some research shows support for psychometric properties of Rorschach Are personality tests appropriate for ethnic minority groups members? Should personality and psychological functioning tests be used in employment decisions? Not designed for this; Some argue still useful; Specific tests developed for this
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Clinical Judgment Ultimately, clinician uses Judgment Impressions Experience Data Examines all the pieces of the puzzle Theoretical framework Prior experience Clinical training Intuitions Managed care insurance companies Highly specific assessment tool Objectify target symptoms
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