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    Joined: Apr 2014
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    Child 1- 2nd grader (7 years 10 months)

    In Bold I've highlighted things that have fallen in the below 60% range.

    Cognitive Abilities:

    GIA- 130
    Verbal Ability- 116
    Thinking Ability- 140
    Cognitive Efficiency- 112
    Comprehension Knowledge-116
    Long-Term Retrieval-101
    Visual-Spatial Thinking-120
    Auditory Possessing- 149
    Fluid Reasoning- 138
    Processing Speed- 102
    Short-Term Memory- 114
    Cognitive Fluency- 96

    Verbal Comprehension- 105
    Visual-Auditory Learning- 101
    Spatial Relations- 106

    Sound Blending- 151
    Concept Formation- 127
    Visual Matching- 104
    Numbers Reversed- 109
    General Information- 126
    Retrieval Fluency- 100
    Picture Recognition- 124
    Auditory Attention- 110
    Analysis-Synthesis- 140
    Decision Speed- 99
    Memory for Words- 113
    Rapid Picture Naming- 94

    Ability/achievement discrepancy:

    Broad reading- 111
    Broad math- 125
    Math calc skill- 126
    Broad written Lang- 130
    Written expression- 152
    brief reading- 110
    Brief math- 126
    Brief writing- 101

    Test of Achievement:

    Broad Reading- 111
    Broad Math- 125
    Broad Written- 104
    Total Achievement- 114

    Letter-word indent- 113
    Reading fluency- 115
    Calculation- 130
    Math fluency- 107
    Spelling- 99
    Writing fluency- 111
    Passage comprehension- 104
    Applied problems- 116
    Writing samples- 104


    Last edited by 2GiftedBoys; 05/10/14 07:10 AM.
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    Child 2- Kindergartner (6 years 1 months)

    Cognitive Abilities:

    GIA- 138
    Verbal Ability- 129
    Thinking Ability- 158
    Cognitive Efficiency- 110
    Comprehension Knowledge- 129
    Long-Term Retrieval- 145
    Visual-Spatial Thinking- 130
    Auditory Possessing-160
    Fluid Reasoning- 144
    Processing Speed- 118
    Short-Term Memory- 104
    Cognitive Fluency- 103


    Verbal Comprehension-123
    Visual-Auditory Learning- 153
    Spatial Relations- 120
    Sound Blending- 164
    Concept Formation- 135
    Visual Matching- 119
    Numbers Reversed- 110
    General Information- 134
    Retrieval Fluency- 108
    Picture Recognition- 126
    Auditory Attention- 129
    Analysis-Synthesis- 141
    Decision Speed- 114
    Memory for Words- 97
    Rapid Picture Naming- 92


    Test of achievement:

    Broad Reading - 135
    Broad Math- 142
    Broad Written- 140
    Total Achievement Standard- 139

    Letter-word ident- 156
    Reading fluency- 126
    Calculation- 143
    Math fluency- 136
    Spelling- 142
    Writing fluency- 128
    Passage comprehension- 127
    Applied problems- 133
    Writing samples- 131

    Last edited by 2GiftedBoys; 05/10/14 07:00 AM.
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    Keeping in mind that scores do not tell the whole story, I'll see what I can offer as hypotheses, based on what you've reported.

    On the 7 yo:

    There is a substantial difference between verbal and abstract thinking, which appears to be borne out in the achievement testing, with the two language-related areas average/high average versus superior for mathematics (which is more in the neighborhood of the fluid reasoning & thinking ability scores). Reading comprehension is more closely related to language comprehension (in fact, they line up quite nicely here). Supporting this as a genuine pattern is the difference between concept formation, which is both a fluid reasoning task and associated with verbal conceptual thinking, and analysis-synthesis, which is the other fluid reasoning test, but much more perceptual in nature. While both are strong, analysis-synthesis is exceptional.

    The next pattern of difference that I'm seeing has to do with timed/speeded tasks. Every timed task reported is in the Average range, quite a bit below the GIA. Hence the lower cluster scores in cognitive efficiency, long-term retrieval (because of the retrieval fluency score), processing speed, and cognitive fluency. Working memory looks like it might be a little sketchy, too, as numbers reversed is only okay.

    You know your son best, so you will be in a better position to say what might be behind this pattern, or how much it reflects daily experience, but in summary, his score profile suggests strengths in nonverbal/perceptual reasoning and auditory processing, and relative weaknesses in language reasoning, speed, and working memory. Academic implications would be strengths in mathematical thinking and problem solving, and relative weaknesses in reading comprehension, and possibly fluency/automaticity areas (reading fluency, math fact fluency, writing fluency).

    I'll get to the other child a little later.


    ...pronounced like the long vowel and first letter of the alphabet...
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    Is it the cognitive, the achievement or both? Just my son's only have 10 subtests. Ds5' long term memory was a lot lower than short term probably because it was the last test an he was over it.

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    Nothing to add to the interpretation, but having not seen the Woodcock Johnson details before it is nice to see a test that includes long term retrieval as that has always seemed a gaping omission in other tests.


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    I just have to say I was extremely bummed to see my 7 year old score so low. That week of testing was awful for him. He had missed 3 days of school from high fever then they yard to squeeze in all the testing to finish up before their deadline. I can't help but wonder if this had affected te scores. He has always been praised with high reading and writing abilities. His cogat and GrAde test scores were all in the 7-8-9 staine. His Map test scores showed the Same 98 % ranges.

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    I also do not understand the RPI detail. (75/90-96/90)= age appropriate.

    Most of them are listed at 98/90-100/90

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    I went ahead and added the discrepancy report for my second grader, none of which registered significant.

    Last edited by 2GiftedBoys; 05/10/14 07:13 AM.
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    Originally Posted by puffin
    Is it the cognitive, the achievement or both? Just my son's only have 10 subtests. Ds5' long term memory was a lot lower than short term probably because it was the last test an he was over it.

    Your son probably only had the standard cognitive battery; there is also an extended battery, which is about twice as long (actually a little more, if you do every single subtest possible). It's always tough assessing little ones, as so much depends on how they are feeling at that moment.


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    Originally Posted by 2GiftedBoys
    I just have to say I was extremely bummed to see my 7 year old score so low. That week of testing was awful for him. He had missed 3 days of school from high fever then they yard to squeeze in all the testing to finish up before their deadline. I can't help but wonder if this had affected te scores. He has always been praised with high reading and writing abilities. His cogat and GrAde test scores were all in the 7-8-9 staine. His Map test scores showed the Same 98 % ranges.

    Yes, I expect it did affect him; hard to say how much. In future, it may help to know that the deadlines for them to finish testing are usually there to protect your parental rights on behalf of your child. Therefore, if you choose to give them more time (in writing) to complete the evaluation, you can do so. Unless this is an issue of making the deadline for gifted program selection, in which case they would also have to agree to bend those.

    Just have to mention that a stanine of 7 is the 79th - 88th %ile, which is equivalent to a standard score of 112-118, and a stanine of 8 is the 90 - 96th %ile, which is a standard score of 119-126, so it is possible that his group achievement testing is actually consistent with his WJIII achievement, depending on which scores were in which stanine.

    Last edited by aeh; 05/10/14 02:34 PM. Reason: mea culpa. my stanine conversions were a little off; the original point stands, though.

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