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    Joined: May 2013
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    Plus, DS HATES being put on the spot or feel like he's being quizzed. Even if I ask him math questions that are obvious, he will sometimes refuse to answer. He apparently acted kind of silly while taking the WISC and was actually up and pacing around the room which is not like him at all (he does things like that when anxious)....I'm surprised he did as well on it as he did. I just can't see him defining vocabulary words for a stranger with more than one or two words, and it has nothing to do with his verbal knowledge, it's just something that he wouldn't want to do. HOwever if they asked the same questions on the computer and gave it to him in multiple choice format (even if there were 10 answer choices), he'd probably do great. It doesn't make sense to me that he scores so well for reading comprehension (school computerized testing over the 99th percentile) if his verbal IQ is average.

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    Loy58 Offline OP
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    Thanks, everyone! Squishys and blackcat - yes, I wonder, too, whether the WISC doesn't work better for identifying the strengths of a chatterbox wink (like my DD, but NOT like my DS)! Ideally, a test would pick up on the various strengths and weaknesses of various children, so that we know how to best help them learn.

    blackcat - it sounds like your DS did very well on the WISC. But he might do even better on another (better for him) test in the future. Also, I wonder if some DC just may do better when they are older (if your DS is retested in a couple of years) - I think that testing a younger child just might have many variables (and that is why I am wondering about whether my DS is old enough). Perhaps your DS will be a great CogAT test taker (I know, not the favorite test), and he might excel on the EXPLORE? I do not think a single test is very useful for understanding any of our children, anyway. Multiple data points over time give a much better picture. Thanks, again!

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    Yes, I'm actually debating having him take the CogAT and just see what happens....but then it's stuck in school records and we've had an awful experience with it in the past as have other parents. First I'm going to see if they'll just accept his old WISC, and if not, then we'll have some decisions to make.

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    DS also had a huge gap between math achievement score and IQ score. It shouldn't really be possible to have such a difference. I do think younger age mathy kids get short changed by the WISC IV compared to their math scores.

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    There was research done in Australian on younger subjects comparing the SB5 and the WPPSI which indicated that the two tests were fairly comparable but for a certain percentage of children their scores would be quite significantly different and there was no apparent pattern, there were kids going high or low on both tests and they checked for which order they were given and various other possible causes (ie the kids weren't doing much better on the first test or the second test, etc). In the end the conclusion was that the effect was due either to one or both of 1) small kids have variable performance 2) some kids may simply be better suited to one test or the other.

    What I personally have seen is that my girls who have both done at least one Wechsler test and the SB5, their verbal scores were almost identical across all tests used (no more than 2-3 points variability) but both my girls do far better on the non verbal of SB5, half a standard deviation or more better. There is something about the WISC non verbal that doesn't work for them (and it's not the block design, it's the cartoon based tests).

    Also being tested by a gifted expert helps, particularly with my more gifted child the gifted specialist did a far better job of drawing her out and of moving at her pace.

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    I was going to suggest the WJIII cognitive plus the matching achievement but if no-one will accept it where you are there isn't much point. I can fairly confidently state that it it good for mathy kids.

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    Loy58 Offline OP
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    FWIW, DS6 was tested with the WISC. It did manage to capture some of the abilities that I was seeing. FSIQ was DYS range, with GAI about a standard deviation above (which is very, very close in overall reasoning abilities to his more verbal sister). To be fair, DS has more "verbal" strength than I gave him credit for - he qualified for the use of extended norms in the VERBAL section (just lower than his more extreme-verbal sister). Apparently, I am a poor judge of verbal ability, because I was comparing my quieter DS to my super-verbal DD. Overall, he has a more even profile than his sister (he is higher than her on PRI), but their FSIQ/GAIs are freakishly similar.

    We will do achievement testing. It is very helpful to hear the experiences of others here with either the WIAT or the WJ.

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    DD tested on the SB5 and I wouldn't say she is particularly mathy. She did get a DYS qualifying score. Her FSIQ is a bit lower then her WJ ACh and her RIAS, but I would say it is valid. One thing to ask is if you think your DC may ceiling out in a few areas on the SB5 ask the tester in advance if they have the manual to calculate the EXIQ. I found that many psychs and some even recommended on Hoagies didn't think the SB5 had the ability to calculate extended norms and none had the manual. I think most psychs who administer the SB5 don't administer it as often as the WISC, and when they do use the SB5 they don't come across those who qualify for extended norm calculation.
    On a side note, I was told multiple times the SB5 is coming to the end of its life and a new version should be out within a year or so.

    Last edited by TNC; 07/24/14 06:00 AM. Reason: Correcting time frame.
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    You have to purchase the extended norms separately for the SBV, unlike the WISC. Also, HMH-Riverside is heavily promoting the rollout of the WJIV this year, so I imagine the SB6 can't be out any earlier than next year. You may have encountered people involved in standardization, which usually finishes about a year before publication.

    And, BTW, it is possible to derive predicted achievement from the SB to the WJ, if you want to know if the achievement scores are comparable to the cognitive. A few points difference is generally not a big deal.


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    Our 7 year old's strength is math (I wouldn't call him a verbal kid) and he got a DYS qualifying score on the Wisc-iv. You may want to see what tests your school district will accept (ours will not take the sb5).

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