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Joined: Dec 2008
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Hi,
The school psych at our school has stated that it is not possible for a duel diagnosis of gifted and ASD. She is adamant that good social understanding is necessary for lots of verbal subtests on IQ tests, so by definition they can't coexist?
I am well aware that twice exceptional ASD and gifted is accepted.
Does anyone have any references on this issue?
Thanks
Steph
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AAAaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhh. I *think* that is a load of bs or misunderstanding on the part of the psycholgist. but then again, maybe I am not getting what is meant by 'asd'/autism spectrum disorder, that seems kind of broad... does this mean Asperger's? Here is the book I was referred to and I think it is an excellent well grounded book. Yes these second 'E's will mess with doing well on an iq test, but it doesn't mean a child with ASD can't be extremely smart, in fact gifted. http://www.amazon.com/Misdiagnosis-Diagnoses-Gifted-Children-Adults/dp/0910707642also found this... http://gcq.sagepub.com/content/53/2/89.abstract
Last edited by chris1234; 07/22/11 05:26 PM.
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Joined: Apr 2010
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Your school psych is sadly misinformed. It is possible for children with limited social awareness to do very well on lots of kinds of verbal tests. One article (not that I agree with all of it): http://www.davidsongifted.org/db/Articles_id_10167.aspxDeeDee
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Oh, and to state that someone can't be gifted unless they score well on one of these tests is a very limited view of things!
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My son has an Asperger's dx and he did very well on the verbal part of his Reynolds ...134 which was 99 %tile (very superior) and didn't do as well on the non verbal (101 which is average)....so if that makes him not aspergers I would be really happy, save us a lot of grief if he magically didn't have those challenges anymore.
But I think it probably just means that every child is unique.
...reading is pleasure, not just something teachers make you do in school.~B. Cleary
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My Aspie son didn't score nearly as well on the comprehension subtest of the WISC as he did on the other verbal subtests - his comprehension subtest score was only average - but that didn't stop him from ending up with a 134 VCI, which is at the 99th percentile. His scores on the Reynolds (RIAS), which does not include social comprehension measures in the verbal section, were far higher - 147 verbal composite. So, one way to look at that difference is that the comprehension subtest alone depressed his verbal composite score nearly a full SD, but even depressed, it still fell squarely in the gifted range.
I will vouch for the idea that Aspergers can make it hard for a gifted child to show what they are capable of on some IQ tests. This is a very different thing from it making them not gifted, and it is something to be aware of when having a child on the spectrum evaluated.
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I am currently reading Different Minds - which directly addresses gifted children with Aspergers or ADHD (or both). And it talks about exactly what aculady mentions, that on WISC you may see lower comprehension scores, but in a gifted child the similarities and vocab will likely be very high. Sweetie's sons pattern with depressed non verbal is also a recognised pattern according to this book. Which surprised me as i thought that those with aspergers were supposed to be visual spatial thinkers. It's an interesting book.
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Tell her that my son does, indeed, exist, and has done so quite well now for almost 9 years.  He is a DYS with Asperger's. Now, the IQ test, that's a different ball game -- but he's scored heavy 99.9s on WJIII twice, and nobody who's been around him for five minutes has ever doubted that he's quite gifted.
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Depressed non-verbal scores are common, but frequently at least partly due to problems with visual processing, visual-motor integration, and fine motor coordination (all of which are common areas of difficulty for Aspies), as most of the subtests used to measure non-verbal reasoning rely heavily on these areas. My son shows a pretty "typical Aspie" profile in his scores . High verbal skills and poor visual and motor skills are very common in this group. "Classic" autism kids tend to be less verbal and more visual-spatial as a group, since language delay excludes an Aspergers diagnosis and is one of the diagnostic features of classic autism, at least until they do away with the distinction between the two.
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Nice clarification, aculady! I did not know that.
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