Testing
Does your child have the skills needed
to learn?
Your
child has probably taken achievement tests. These tests
measure how well a child is doing in an academic subject.
Intelligence
(mental skills/cognition) tests measure the underlying
learning skills the child has. Unfortunately, these test
results are very often misinterpreted.
Most
intelligence/cognition tests look at all of these
mental skills in our model and although most give a total
"IQ" score, we are far more interested in the
individual test scores of the different mental abilities
that are being tested.
The
"IQ" score is just an average of the separate
mental skills being evaluated. It tells us nothing about
the individual strengths and weaknesses of the underlying
skills that would be important for reading, math calculations,
comprehension, or geometry etc.
But, by analyzing the individual test scores and comparing
them with the child's achievement levels in different
subject areas, we can determine a cause and effect relationship
between the underlying mental skills required and the
achievement area affected.
For example, poor sound blending, segmenting, and analysis
(the CAUSE) will result in difficulty in reading and spelling
(the EFFECT). When these underlying skills are developed,
reading and spelling will improve.
After
testing has confirmed or pinpointed the underlying cause
of a learning problem, the next step is to institute a
program to correct the deficient learning skill.
For
more information or to contact us to book an appointment
. Click here.