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Measuring General Learning Ability by: Ashley Ferrell

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Slosson Full-Range Intelligence Test (S-FRIT) ... Test should be used as a screener not to be used in deciding final eligibility ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measuring General Learning Ability by: Ashley Ferrell


1
Measuring General Learning Abilityby
Ashley Ferrell
2
General Learning Ability
  • the ability to catch on or understand
    instructions and underlying principles the
    ability to reason and make judgements -closely
    related to doing well in school

3
Test 1 for Assessing General Learning Ability
4
Slosson Full-Range Intelligence Test (S-FRIT)
5
Slosson Full-Range Intelligence Test (S-FRIT)
  • Purpose Screen intellectual strength and
    weaknesses with a brief instrument
  • Has 252 test items divided into
  • Verbal Index
  • Perfomance Index
  • Memory Index
  • Time for administration Allow 20-35 minutes
  • Subtests
  • Rapid Cognitive Index allows for more rapid
    results using 181 of 252 questions

6
Slosson Full-Range Intelligence Test (S-FRIT)
  • Norm Group Standardized on 1,509 children and
    adolescents representative of a U.S. census
  • Results Yielded A Full-Range Intelligence
    Quotient (only takes a few minutes)
  • Types of scores
  • Raw scores
  • Standard scores
  • Percentile rank
  • Stanines

7
Slosson Full-Range Intelligence Test (S-FRIT)
  • Reliability Internal consistency reliability for
    median values range from .96-.98 with a mean of
    100 and standard deviation of 16
  • At age 10, standard error of measurement is 2.77
  • Age group ages 5-21 years
  • Where used school, business, and clinical
    settings
  • At Regent University, costs 20.00 for the patient

8
Slosson Full-Range Intelligence Test (S-FRIT)
  • Strengths
  • Easily scores
  • Quick test
  • Weaknesses
  • Test should be used as a screener not to be
    used in deciding final eligibility

9
Test 2 for Assessing General Learning Ability
10
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
11
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • History
  • Alfred Binet, a French educator, created the
    Binet-Simon Test in 1905 with the purpose of
    developing a way of identifying children who were
    behind in their academic performance so that they
    could receive remedial education
  • In 1916, Lewis Terman worked with Binet at
    Stanford University to produce a majorly revised
    version

12
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
13
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Purpose Measure general mental ability
  • Time for Administration 45-60 minutes, depending
    on age and ability
  • Age Range 2-90 years old
  • Date of Most Recent Version 2003
  • Created in 1905

14
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Organization of the Fifth Edition
  • Subtests (15) of the Fourth Edition
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension
  • Verbal absurdities
  • Pattern analysis
  • Matrices
  • Paper folding and cutting
  • Copying
  • Quantitative
  • Number Series
  • Equation building
  • Memory for sentences
  • Memory for digits
  • Memory for objects
  • Bead memory

15
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Norm group Normed on a stratified random sample
    of 4,800 individuals that matches the 2000 U.S.
    Census
  • Reliability based on satisfactoriness and a high
    biserial correlation between individual subtests
    and the total score (1972 version)

16
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Interpretation of results Standard score of 100,
    standard deviation of 15
  • Scored by hand or my computer software
  • standard scores, percentile ranks, age
    equivalents, and change-sensitive scores
  • Includes Full Scale IQ, Verbal and Nonverbal
    IQ, and Composite Indices spanning 5 dimensions
  • Subtests have a mean of 10 and standard deviation
    of 3

17
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Administration of test must be by a trained
    professional, preferably a psychologist
  • Cost in 1997, Medicare reimbursement rate for
    intelligence testing 58.35

18
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Comprehensive measurement of five factors
  • Fluid Reasoning
  • Knowledge
  • Quantitative Reasoning
  • Visual-Spatial Processing
  • Working Memory

19
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Helps identify
  • Learning disabled
  • Gifted
  • Mentally Retarded
  • ADHD
  • Speech and language delayed
  • Alzheimer's/dementia
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Autistic

20
Stanford-Binet Test (5th edition)
  • Strengths
  • Greater diagnostic and clinical relevance of
    tasks, such as verbal and nonverbal assessment of
    working memory
  • Extensive high-end items, many adapted from
    previous Stanford-Binet editions and designed to
    measure the highest level of gifted performance
  • Improved low-end items for better measurement of
    young children, low functioning older children,
    or adults with Mental Retardation
  • Wide variety of items requiring nonverbal
    performance by examinee--ideal for assessing
    individuals with limited English, deafness, or
    communication disorders
  • Weaknesses
  • None noted

21
Rehab Context of Intelligence Tests
  • Schools
  • Testing for learning disabilities
  • Businesses
  • Selecting job applicants
  • Military
  • Selecting personnel for specialized jobs
  • Medicine
  • Testing mental capacity, evaluating brain damage

22
General Learning Ability
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