The Parent
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The Different Types of
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15 points either way would be called one "deviation". Two deviations is considered serious enough for concern. Of course, if your child is two deviations ABOVE the mean, it means he/she excels in that area. One example of the 100 mean is the I.Q. test. If your child tests out with a composite score of 100, that is smack-in-the-middle-average. If the score is 85-115, that is still average and our one deviation range of 15 points---get it?
If your child's score is 70 or 130 you are looking at two deviations. Below 70 is considered the retardation range, over 130 is considered the gifted range.
Speaking of composite scores---I do not like them and do not go by them. If you are a marvelous swimmer and make a high score in competition say 95, and a lousy runner who makes a score of 15, how can an average of the two scores, (55) have any possible importance? Always look at each subtest score individually, and get help for the low ones and encourage and enrich and build on those unusually high scores. This is where you discover a child's academic strengths, as well as weaknesses.
Some tests, like a lot of subtests I have seen, have a mean of 10. That means the same as the above. Half did better, half did worse. If your child has more than 3 points off of 10, it can be a cause for concern. They go by "deviations". When the "mean" or "norm" is 10, a standard deviation is 3 points. If a child has 2 deviations in a subtest, it's cause for serious concern.
Measures knowledge against certain criteria--such as knowledge of one area of language. These tests usually have more than one version and the tester will change the versions around with a student, so they won't memorize the questions or tasks. These tests are good for planning instructional strategies and measuring progress.
Some of these tests to measure knowledge in the general education curriculum are published by book manufacturers, some by a state's Department of Education. The Iowa Test of Basic Skills is an example.
This is an assessment without the use of formalized tests. The student is measured against the general curriculum to see if the deviation is enough to qualify for special education.
If this testing method is used exclusively, there's lots of missing information. There are no clues as to why the student is not keeping up, as you would get from WISC-III or other testing data. That's why this method should NOT be used as the only qualification method for learning disabilities. Understanding WHY a student is not keeping up is very important, and this type of assessment does not give that information.
All ways of assessing are important in their own way, even teacher observations. However, too much "teacher observation" assessment leaves nothing to show, or prove, achievement of the goals and objectives. Teacher assessment can be subjective and should be only one part of any assessment. I recommend parents not let progress towards the short term goals on the Individual Education Plan (IEP) be measured by "teacher observation" only. While it's an important component, it shouldn't be the sole means of testing. Objective, measurable testing should always be included and is required by law.
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