Just noticed your question about more subtests:

She did receive all the possible subtests for a three-year-old. If she had been tested a month later, at four years old, testing would have included the Fluid Reasoning and Processing Speed clusters. In my experience, a cognitively bright young four-year-old might benefit from including the Fluid Reasoning cluster, as that is where advanced abstract thinking and problem solving are most likely to be documented, but might be at a disadvantage when including the Processing Speed cluster, as fine motor development is so variable at this age. Net change in FSIQ--a wash.


...pronounced like the long vowel and first letter of the alphabet...