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Declare
the past, diagnose the present, foretell the future; practice
these acts. As to diseases, make a habit of two things - to help
or at least do no harm.
- Hippocrates,
Epidemics Book I
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Parents are at their most vulnerable when their child is struggling.
They want information, and they trust experts to tell them what
is wrong and to give advice about how they can make it better. But
they need to be very careful about finding the information they
desperately seek and the advice they fervently want: there is an
art and a science to testing, and results are not always what they
seem. My first experience with testing was as a parent, not as a
professional, and it is an experience I will always remember.
When my daughter, Jessica, was about twenty months old, she had
her first IQ test. She sat on my lap as the test administrator brought
out the first items: blocks! Jessica enthusiastically grabbed the
blocks and started to build, but the tester stopped her and told
her to make her blocks look like the tower the tester had made.
Dubiously, Jessica made the tower as requested, then began to make
her own construction again. The test administrator, however, had
checked off her item and no longer needed blocks. She grabbed the
blocks from in front of Jessica, put them away, and pulled out the
next task materials: a cup and a small ball. Jessica was upset at
having the blocks taken, but was intrigued by the ball and cup.
The administrator covered the ball with the cup, and asked Jessica
to find it, which she did. Then she pulled out a couple more cups
and began to hide the ball again. Jessica liked this game, and after
finding the ball again she was ready to play by hiding the ball
from the administrator. However, the administrator had checked off
her item, and put the ball and cup away. Needless to say, after
a few of these encounters, Jessica was having none of it. In fact,
as the administrator put the new materials in front of her, Jessica
simply picked them up and threw them at the administrator. (Even
twenty-six years later, Jessica is not known for her ability to
suffer fools gladly.) Pretty much every item from then on was marked
with a zero. Of course, the test results indicated that Jessica
had a very low IQ, as she was "unable" to complete these
items.
Obviously, this test administrator had not mastered the art of
testing. She was testing something, but it was not what she had
meant to measure (Jessica's intelligence). She may have been testing
Jessica's patience or compliance or ability to follow directions,
but she was not testing whether or not Jessica could figure out
the puzzles she was placing in front of her. Luckily, I was in the
room and watched the whole proceeding, so I knew not to trust the
results. If I had not been there, though, as a young mother with
a disabled child, I would have been devastated by these results.
Here was an "expert" who was telling me my child was very
mentally retarded.
When Jessica was six years old, she was again tested, this time
by the public school system's educational psychologist in the US.
I don't know if this person had mastered the art of testing, because
this time I wasn't in the room. But I was the person to whom the
psychologist explained the results. Jessica had taken the WISC,
an IQ test that has several subtests and subscales. On some of them,
she had scored above the 95th percentile, in the gifted range. On
others, she had scored below the 5th percentile, in the severely
impaired range. When you averaged the high scores together with
the low scores, the result was 100 - a perfectly average score.
The school psychologist (Dr. Somebody) explained to me that the
school couldn't possibly make special accommodations for Jessica
because she had a perfectly average IQ. When I pointed out that
she was not average in any area - she was either gifted or impaired
- he told me that it didn't matter, because it all averaged together.
Again, I was lucky in that by that time I was running an evaluation
center at Arizona State University and was clear on the fact that
this man didn't know what he was talking about. He didn't understand
the science of testing. So I moved Jessica to a private school that
would address her special needs.
The Art
In order to test kids, it is important to like kids, to be interested
in kids, and to understand how to elicit the best performance possible
from kids. The skills every teacher needs - patience, a sense of
humor, a bit of firmness, a touch of playfulness - all are important
in fostering an environment where a child feels comfortable. If
a child does not feel comfortable, the child will not be performing
at his or her best. And if the child is not performing at his or
her best, then what are the tests measuring?
The tests used in a psychoeducational assessment are complex enough
that there is really only one way to score well on them - to score
well, a child must have the necessary abilities or skills. But there
are always many reasons that a child might score badly on these
tests. The child could have a cold, or be overly tired, or be shy
or scared or overexcited. He or she could have had a fight with
a sibling or parent that morning, a cranky car ride, or a nightmare.
I once tested a teenager who (as I found out after the testing)
was hung over. Emotional problems such as depression, anxiety, or
obsessive-compulsive behaviors might affect test results. (Has everyone
seen the episode of Monk in which he takes his police exam?) In
other words, there are many ways in which psychoeducational testing
can underestimate a child's true abilities or skills. Part of the
art of testing is to recognize (and note down) the things that might
be interfering with a child's best performance and to minimize those
things if possible. If the child is old enough, the test administrator
should always attempt to assess emotional problems that may be interfering
with test results at the same time as he or she measures problem-solving
and achievement.
The Science
There is a lot to know about testing, and most of it does not concern
the actual administration or scoring of the tests themselves. In
fact, these tests are beautifully designed, so most of them come
with very simple-to-follow manuals, scoring guides, and even computer
writers so all the administrator must do is enter the scores in
the computer and push "return." Anyone reading this article,
really, could administer and score these tests with a very small
amount of training, just as we could all probably look up medications
in a Physician's Desk Reference and find out about how to treat
arthritis. So why should only a licensed psychologist supervise
and interpret these tests and only a medical doctor prescribe drugs?
Obviously, a good test administrator should know where the tests
come from (test construction) and what the statistics mean. That's
just basic. Otherwise, the results cannot be explained and the test
itself cannot be evaluated. For example, it seems that the psychologist
who tested Jessica when she was six did not understand how the test
was constructed to reflect different ability areas that could not
be averaged if they were highly divergent.
A good test administrator also has to know what factors are being
measured by each subtest, and this is important because the administrator
then has to rely on his or her art to eliminate all other factors.
For example, there are many subtests that purport to measure processing
speed. For older kids, these are fairly straightforward. Younger
kids, however, do not always understand the concept of time or what
they are doing in a "race" to see how much can be completed
in a given period. They can do the practice exercises (4 or 5 of
them) very well and very quickly, but if you turn the page to something
that contains a hundred problems and say, "Let's see how many
you can complete in a minute," the child looks at the page
and says, "That's too many. I can't do that." He doesn't
understand the concept of racing the clock. (This would be similar
to entering a library and telling the child that we were going to
measure how many books he can read in a minute, only to have him
look at all the books in the library with dismay and say he just
can't read all those books!) This being the case, it is useful to
play with the stopwatch with younger kids - to see how many times
a child can run across the room, or to allow the child to find out
how many times the tester can pat her head, or how many times we
can both hop up and down in fifteen seconds. With a few of these
exercises, the child is much more eager to begin a longer process
and see how many problems can be completed in a minute. If we simply
allow the child to moan that there are too many problems, we may
be measuring maturity or time-concept, but we are not measuring
processing speed, which is the purpose of that subtest.
In another example, there is a subtest that I often use that purports
to measure working memory. The test is presented on a tape, and
has longer and longer strings of items that must be manipulated
and remembered. The tape leaves a space of time for the response,
but only allows for the amount of time typically taken by the average
child. If a child is working slowly, he or she might bump into the
next item on the tape before having completed the response. The
subtest's purpose is to measure working memory - not response speed.
In order to correctly measure working memory, the administrator
should pause the tape if the child is taking longer than expected.
Otherwise, the child becomes anxious or worried, tries to hurry,
and/or simply doesn't complete the task in the time allotted. If
this happens, the test may be measuring something but it will not
be measuring working memory. There are actually many test administrators
who fail to pause the tape, thereby completely mismeasuring the
true working memory of the child. Their reason? The company that
produces the test made the tape and therefore they feel they are
following the dictates of the company. But the truth is that the
company that makes the test explains in its own training sessions
that the timing on the tape is arbitrary and that the administrator
should (of course) pause the tape if the time is not appropriate
for a child. Again, it is important to understand the factors being
measured, rather than to simply follow the instruction booklet (or
tape) blindly.
Of course, for comparison purposes, there are some very strict
guidelines that must be observed in any standardized testing situation.
The trick is to know what can be added in or changed, remembering
always the basic purpose of each subtest. Jessica's first test administrator,
for example, would not have been bending the rules had she brought
out the cup while Jessica continued to play with the blocks and,
with a little enthusiasm and playfulness, gotten Jessica interested
in the new task before putting away the last. Similarly, playing
with a stopwatch before testing does not interfere with the standardization
of the processing speed tasks. It simply encourages the child to
attend to them.
Once the administrator has appropriately approached each specific
factor being measured, however, it is also important that he or
she understand the factors and how they relate to each other and
how they relate to cognitive development and learning. The field
of cognitive development is complex and interesting, and doesn't
just consist of a bunch of numbers in a chart. There are many theories
and much research concerning the development of thought and thinking
abilities. How does working memory develop, and how is it related
to learning new materials or to emotion? How is auditory attention
related to general intelligence? Is the relationship the same at
all ages? Would we expect the same range of phonemic awareness for
eighteen-year olds as we would expect for six-year olds? These may
sound like esoteric issues, but in fact they can make a big difference
when interpreting the numbers or making a diagnosis!
And, finally, if the test administrator is going to give advice
to parents and schools, he or she has to know a little about education.
What are the pedagogical controversies surrounding dyslexia, for
example? How can a teacher's job be made easier, not harder, by
the recommendations? What is normal behavior in a classroom, and
what can we do about situations or needs that are not normal? So,
if working with teachers, the psychologist needs to have had significant
training in or experience with schools. Similarly, if advising parents,
the administrator needs to have had significant experience in the
field working with children and/or be a parent.
Necessary Background
If we look at what is needed to learn the art and science of
test administration and interpretation, we can see that the necessary
qualifications are fairly easy to define. A test administrator
has to have:
A strong background working with children. The test administrator
has to have mastered the art of playing and teaching with kids.
This means that the administrator must, at the very least, have
a strong and long-lasting interest in kids that has shaped his
or her education and career. Work in schools or children-centered
facilities is a good indicator of longstanding interest.
A strong understanding of cognitive and emotional development
and how children think, learn and behave differently at different
ages, as well as behavioral and emotional development across different
ages. (What could be diagnosed as psychotic in an adult, such
as a fear that vampires are in the tennis courts, might be a normal
fear for an eight-year old!) This understanding is best achieved
through a Ph.D. in a child-centered area of psychology.
A strong understanding of tests and measurement, what each
test is supposed to measure, and how to best elicit a measure
of each factor. The best way to achieve this understanding is,
again, with a Ph.D. in an area of psychology related to child
cognitive development.
If the administrator is then going to give advice to schools
and teachers, he or she must have some understanding of what is
possible in a classroom. This is best achieved either through
direct experience in a classroom (as a teacher) or through having
worked directly with teachers in a school setting.
If the administrator is going to give advice to parents, he
or she should have, again, a strong background working with families
and/or have experience as a parent. As every parent can tell you,
what is in the textbooks about parenting is not always what happens
in the home - nor should it be. Young and enthusiastic graduates,
even in child psychology, usually have many ideas about what good
parents should do and how this will create perfect children. When
they become parents, they often learn that their children haven't
read the textbooks.
Of course, psychologists don't always give all of the tests in
an assessment themselves. Quite often they have hired trained administrators,
graduate students or psychometrists who can administer portions
of the tests for them. In this case, it is very important that three
conditions are met: First, the test administrator must at least
have the first quality listed here - a strong background with and
interest in children. Someone with an advanced degree in child psychology
or education fits this criterion for example. Someone with a background
in business administration does not. Second, the test administrator
should be specifically trained as to the particular tests involved,
the meaning or purpose of each test, and the types of things that
might interfere with a correct assessment. Third, while it is not
necessary that the psychologist administer all the tests, the psychologist
should spend at least some of the testing time in direct administration
of tests in order to form a personal understanding of the child
and to be able to use professional judgment in the interpretation
of results.
Qualifications
Educational qualifications are confusing to begin with, but become
even more confusing in our multi-cultural setting. Parents may have
to do some exploration to find out the background of an individual
practitioner. Don't take the word "Dr." and the fact that
the person is performing the tests to mean that the practitioner
has the background described above. A medical doctor, for example,
does not study educational testing or cognitive development as part
of his or her training, any more than a psychologist studies heart
surgery.
But it is more complicated than simply finding a psychologist.
For example, in the United States, there is only one qualification
for "Licensed Clinical Psychologist," but many paths to
that qualification. To get the qualification, a person must have
a Ph.D. in psychology, then do a two-year internship, then take
a national exam that covers all areas of psychology, then take local
state boards. Sounds like a lot, right? But there are many types
of psychology. A person could get a Ph.D. in Industrial/Organizational
Psychology (focusing, for instance, on how to maximize employee
satisfaction or productivity), do a two-year internship at Merrill-Lynch,
then take the exams and be a Licensed Clinical Psychologist - all
without ever having studied children, cognitive development, education,
or educational testing!
One of many specializations in psychology is that of Clinical Psychology.
A person who gets a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology in the U.S. normally
chooses between the adult track and one or many child tracks in
their clinical program. Again, someone who follows the adult track
may learn about adult psychopathology, but is unlikely to spend
much time learning about childhood issues related to education or
development or to have completed much, if any, supervised work with
children. (And, of course, anyone who has a choice of child or adult
tracks and chooses the adult track probably doesn't have a primary
interest in children in the first place.)
Luckily, there is a simple way to sort through this quagmire of
qualifications, at least for US-trained psychologists. The best
way to find out about the graduate-school interest and focus of
a graduate in Clinical Psychology, or of a US-licensed Clinical
Psychologist, is to ask about that all-important two-year internship!
The internship is typically arranged or approved by the Ph.D. advisor,
and will reflect the area of interest, type of classes and supervised
practica followed in graduate school. Any Clinical Psychologist
should be able to provide proof of their internship, which for these
purposes should be in a school, community mental health center,
or other setting related to kids and testing.
Of course, most professionals follow their area of training and
interest and develop their career around these things. People who
do their internships at Merrill-Lynch usually go on to a career
in a similar setting. But, unfortunately, some do not as they may
find it more lucrative to work outside their area of expertise or
interest. As parents, it is important to ask carefully about internship,
educational background and interests before you pay money to get
meaningless test results or inappropriate recommendations.
A Final Note
Finally, and this recommendation is true no matter who is providing
your testing: trust what you know about your child. No matter how
qualified the practitioner, or how carefully the testing was done,
the results are based on tests that are not perfect, in a situation
that may not be optimal. The results are good guides, and often
very helpful in finding reasons for things you may be seeing at
home or at school. But if they tell you something that does not
make sense to you, they may be wrong. A good practitioner will be
cautious in his or her interpretation of the results, and you should
be cautious as well. If I had not been, I would have believed that
Jessica was extremely mentally impaired when she was two and "average"
when she was six. I assure you, now that she is an adult it is clear
that she is not mentally retarded and is anything but average.
Along the same lines, take diagnoses with the caution they deserve,
and remember that a diagnosis should be helpful, not harmful. One
of my favorite quotes is the line by Goody Nurse in The Crucible
by Arthur Miller, a story about the Salem witch trials. When she
sees the girls writhing on their beds, seemingly stricken by the
devil, she says, "I have eleven children, and I am twenty-six
times a grandma, and I have seen them all through their silly seasons,
and when it comes on them they will run the Devil bowlegged keeping
up with their mischief." (Of course, the town does not listen
to Goody Nurse, and the resultant trials kill many innocent citizens!)
Goody Nurse's point is that children do have transient periods of
odd or dysfunctional behaviors. It is important to address them,
one by one, for what they are, not for what they might be or could
turn into or could signify. It is important to proceed with caution
and love, forcefully and intensively addressing the problems that
have been clearly identified, but without attempting to second-guess
what these particular problems may mean about the future of your
child. The diagnosis does not define your child: it should be meant
to clarify and help, not to limit or dismiss. Don't turn a "silly
season" into a witch trial, and don't allow others to do so
either, no matter how professional or expert they may seem.
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