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Are IQ Scores Valid for Children Who Are Poor Readers

TLDR
This article evaluated whether the external validity of IQ scores was moderated by reading levels within 2 separate samples of referred children, and found that IQ scores had expected correlations with external measures of verbal, visual-spatial, short-term memory, and arithmetic ability, and these relations were invariant across levels of reading skill.
Abstract
Remedial services for children with reading problems are often allocated according to discrepancies between reading and IQ scores. Results of some recent research suggest, however, that IQ scores of poor readers do not covary with their levels of functioning in other cognitive domains. This study evaluated whether the external validity of IQ scores (from the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children—Revised) was moderated by reading levels within 2 separate samples of referred children. We found that IQ scores had expected correlations with external measures of verbal, visual-spatial, short-term memory, and arithmetic ability, and that these relations were invariant across levels of reading skill. Many school-age children have reading difficulties, but only some may be classified as reading disabled, which indicates a discrepancy between specific reading proficiency and general cognitive ability. Children so classified may be eligible for general learning disability services or for more specialized programs for the reading disabled. Poor readers who do not meet ability-achievement discrepancy definitions of reading disability may receive other remedial services but, in some instances, may receive none at all. For example, poor readers with IQ scores in the borderline range (e.g., 70-79 on Wechsler scales) may be ineligible for special education services because they are considered to be "slow learners." Poor readers with even lower IQ scores (e.g., 60-69), however, may be eligible for placement in classrooms for the educable mentally impaired, where they may at least receive more individual attention than "slow learners" who remain in regular classrooms. Considering the implications for children's educational careers, it is crucial to demonstrate the validity of allocating special education resources on the basis of discrepancies between reading and general ability levels. There have been two types of criticisms about this method of allocation, however, the second of which provides the main focus of this study. First, as with the broader notion of learning disability, there are numerous conceptual and statistical problems with the operational definition of "significant" ability-reading discrepancies (e.g., see Kamphaus, Frick, & Lahey, 1991; Reynolds, 1984-1985). Second, there has been much debate about whether IQ tests provide valid estimates of general cognitive capacity for children with reading problems. For example, some researchers have argued that poor readers may obtain artificially low IQ scores because

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Journal ArticleDOI

Psychometric Intelligence and Achievement: A Cross-Lagged Panel Analysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, a cross-lagged panel analysis of WISC-III and achievement test scores of 289 students assessed for special education eligibility with a test-retest interval of 2.8 years was conducted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lessons From the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (K-ABC): Toward a New Cognitive Assessment Model

TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative assessment model for the evaluation of children with reading problems is proposed based on lessons learned from the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (K-ABC) and their implications for future directions are identified.

The auditory display in interactive courseware: Moving human factors into computer education

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a list of tables, figures and figures for each of the following categories: Table 1, Table 2, Table 3, Table 4, Table 5, Table 6
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

School Psychologists' Evaluation of the K-ABC, McCarthy Scales, Stanford-Binet IV, and WISC-R

TL;DR: A survey of 856 school psychologists was conducted to assess practitioners' perceptions of the intellectual domains assessed by, and the ease of administration, interpretation, and usefulness of, four commonly used measures of intelligence: the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children; the McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities; the Stanford-Binet, Form IV; and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methodological Issues and Learning Disabilities Diagnosis in Clinical Populations

TL;DR: Results were interpreted as supporting the use of regression approaches to diagnose co-occurring learning disabilities, as that method is less likely to be biased by the child's intelligence test score.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phonological Processes and Other Routes

TL;DR: L'auteur propose une reflexion sur l'utilisation de la mesure des processus phonologiques pour predire les difficultes d'apprentissage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of the peabody individual achievement test-revised

TL;DR: The Peabody Individual Achievement Test-Revised is a significant revision of the original 1970 achievement test from American Guidance Services as mentioned in this paper, which is useful in regular education and as a screening measure for identification of learning disabilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

K-ABC Simultaneous-Sequential Scales and Prediction of Achievement in Reading and Mathematics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relationship between K-ABC simultaneous and sequential scores and achievement in reading and math and found that high simultaneous processing scores were associated with reading decoding, comprehension, and math scores as obtained from the school records.
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