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Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 7,207
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Joined: Dec 2005
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Is that my dd you are describing as well -- lol?! It is my private hunch that pg women with adhd outreproduce pg women who aren't 2e....therefore that will describe a lot of our kids. It really says much more about the training of our teachers than it does about our kids. Smiles Grinity
Coaching available, at SchoolSuccessSolutions.com
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Joined: May 2009
Posts: 2,172
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I actually don't think that I am 2e FWIW, though. I have a touch of SPD like dd13, but not a major issue. Dd11's ADD, etc. seem to stem more from dh than me.
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Joined: May 2010
Posts: 383
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And I am NOT pg!! Maybe mg? And DH has the ADD. I have the OCD. :-)
Tomorrow is always fresh, with no mistakes in it. — L.M. Montgomery
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Joined: May 2009
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And I am NOT pg!! Maybe mg? And DH has the ADD. I have the OCD. :-) Oh, I should have specified that too! I, too, am not PG. I'm more in the MG- maybe HG area depending on how one defines that.
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,694
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Thats my DD described there too. And wow Grinity that's a pretty interesting thought. Part of the last year I have spent coming to understand my own level of 2e-ness as I learn about my kids. I am also not PG, or if I am it's with the radically spiky profile of the 2e, and major, MAJOR under achievement... The thing that is most interesting about this to me is that as a 2e person myself I feel so ill equipped to deal with the demands of raising 3 gifted kids - one MG with major other Es, one HG/PG with some mild other Es by the looks and one that's too young to tell but keeps me REALLY busy. I am so often utterly overwhelmed by the sensory overload produced by three chaos monkeys and by the fact that I NEED order but simply cannot maintain it...
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 57
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Ok. I have the updated WISC scores (tester went back and did additional sub-tests)in along with achievement testing. I'm not sure what to make of the WIAT scores other than maybe she had a bad day? Any input is appreciated.
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children - Fourth Edition (WISC-IV) (Mean = 100, Standard Deviation = 15)
Scale/Composite Standard Score Qualitative Description Full Scale 141 Very Superior General Ability Index (GIA) 148 Very Superior Verbal Comprehension 142 Very Superior Perceptual Reasoning 147 Very Superior Working Memory 107 Average Processing Speed 121 Superior
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children - Fourth Edition (WISC-IV) (Mean = 10, Standard Deviation = 3)
Subtest Scaled Score Similarities 17 Vocabulary 14 Comprehension 16 Information 16 Word Reasoning 16 Block Design 13 Picture Concepts 17 Matrix Reasoning 18 Picture Completion 15 Digit Span 8 Letter-Number Sequencing 13 Arithmetic 10 Coding 13 Symbol Search 12 Cancellation 10
Wechsler Individual Achievement Test-Third Edition (WIAT-III)
Composite Standard Score Percentile Qualitative Description Total Achievement 129 97 Above Average Oral Language 123 94 Above Average Total Reading 133 99 Superior Basic Reading 139 99 Superior Written Expression 128 97 Above Average Mathematics 109 73 Average Math Fluency 93 32 Average
Subtest Standard Score Percentile Listening Comprehension 114 82 Early Reading Skills 112 79 Reading Comprehension 130 98 Math Problem Solving 106 66 Alphabet Writing Fluency 115 84 Sentence Composition 125 95 Word Reading 137 99 Pseudoword Decoding 127 96 Numerical Operations 110 75 Oral Expression 125 95 Oral Reading Fluency 130 98 Spelling 127 96 Math Fluency-Addition 87 19 Math Fluency-Subtraction 98 45
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Joined: May 2011
Posts: 128
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What does the tester think about the difference between the WISC and WIAT scores. My DS had very similar differences and that is what led to his diagnosis of stealth dyslexia. He was even diagnosed with dyscalculia even though he is in the highest math group his school offers (and making 98s, 99s and 100s without difficulty). It just makes you wonder what these 2e children could do if it weren't for that 2nd e.
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Joined: Jul 2011
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I sent the tester an e-mail to see if he has any theories on the discrepancy in the test scores. We'll see what he says. I am wondering would the ADHD lower the WIAT scores like that? The WIAT testing was done on a different day than the WISC. Actually it was done over a two day period. The tester stopped the test early the first day because she was getting tired.
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Joined: May 2011
Posts: 128
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DS9 did his testing (WISC and WIAT) in 3 sessions over a couple of weeks. The neuropsychologist that did his testing said that when looking at the WIAT scores in comparison to the GAI, any difference of more than 15 points is most likely due to a learning disability. In fact, I think that is what the educational system uses to define a learning disability. In our state, the difference has to be 30 points in high school, but only 15 points in elementary school.
Is it possible that ADHD is the only thing getting in the way here? I'm not sure. Possibly? I ended up having someone from a local school for dyslexic children look over DS9's test results. She poured over all the details, looked at his written answers and ultimately made the dyslexia diagnosis. I was floored because he reads well above grade level. But once I started researching stealth dyslexia, it described him perfectly. I'm not trying to suggest that that is what is going on with your child, just suggesting that you make sure you get the answers you are looking for because I don't think it is "normal" to have such a discrepancy between WISC and WIAT.
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 3,363
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I'm not familiar with the WIAT, so I can't help you with specific questions, but fwiw my ds12 has LDs and his scores jump around quite a bit on individual achievement tests (WJ-III) in spite of the fact that he performs extremely well at school. What helped me understand his achievement test results was to look at the specifics of what each subtest measures and how the test is administered - for example, on the WJ-III some subtests are administered by giving an oral prompt, some require reading etc. Some subtests are timed, some are not. Some subtests require a written response, some require an oral response. When I made a chart and grouped subtest score vs response type or prompt type etc, very clear patterns emerged that make sense with respect to his LD.
Just looking briefly at the scores you've posted, most of them seem really a-ok, with math computation possibly an area of weakness. I suspect that any test labelled "fluency" involves a timed component, and when you see a lower score in a timed test with a kid it's quite possible that the reason for the lower score is simply because the test is timed and has nothing to do with the child's mastery of the subject. There can be many reasons that any of the test scores are unexpectedly low, including the timed test. I'd suspect ADHD could make it difficult to finish a test in a given period of time; my ds doesn't have ADHD but the act of handwriting causes him to have a challenge with timed tests.
You should be able to get clarification from your tester - but in the meantime, it might also help to try to google around and find a list detailing what the specifics of each WIAT test are.
Best wishes,
polarbear
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