Saturday, February 11, 2012

Testing for Intelligence


Children in the United States who are referred for special education assessments may or may not be assessed holistically. A child between the ages of 3 and 21 may qualify for special education if he or she meets the eligibility criteria for one of the 13 disabilities defined in the Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) and the disability adversely affects his or her ability to access education. Though a child may be labeled through the school or through health care professionals, the areas and extent a child will receive special education, is based upon results of standardized assessments. Children may be assessed holistically, being tested in academics (reading, writing, math), social/emotional, adaptive, behavior, cognitive, fine motor, gross motor, and communication (receptive language, expressive language, and articulation). Sometimes a child is determined to be in need of assessment in all these areas, sometimes only a few.

I believe this holistic approach is important, because there are many factors that affect how a child learns and is able to access education. Children with disabilities may have more than one “area” affected. A child who misbehaves constantly in the classroom may be doing so out of frustration because academic expectations are out of his or her understanding, or because he or she doesn’t understand much of what the teachers are hearing. To fully understand the extent of areas affected (or rule out those that are not), the child should be assessed not only in academics, but communication as well. This will help the educators and caregivers determine how to help the child: does he or she need academic modifications or communication support? Or both?

Environment, primary language, and sometimes rate of absenteeism may influence whether or not a child receives a label. Professionals must decide if a child may be struggling due other factors not measured by standardized tests. These may include cultural or language barriers, homelessness, or lack of exposure due to high absenteeism. Professionals must consider these factors so children are not labeled with a disability when they truly do not have one.


The country I looked into was Mexico. The identification of disabilities in schoolchildren are done with a holistic approach much like in the U.S. A significant difference is these assessments are not necessarily standardized. They are based off work samples, informal assessments, student history, and educational experience.

The benefit of Mexico’s way of determining whether or not a child receives special education is that it is more closely based on how a child does in comparison to peers in that community. The children therefore are able to access accommodations and modifications that allow them to be successful in their community. This is not always true in schools in the U.S. Standardized tests in the U.S. are based on national norms, however academic requirements vary from state to state. I often see children in the school I work at struggling academically because on standardized tests they score average or low average, but those do not accurately match up to the state standards.

References:
National Research Center on ADHD

Learn NC Editions

3 comments:

  1. You brought up a good point about how children being absent from the classroom for long periods of time could place them at a lower level of learning. Because of this they may have missed important information. When they are tested the person doing the assessment could categorize them incorrectly and the child could be labeled special needs. This could be a good example of why children need to be evaluated with the whole child approach.

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  2. Caroline,

    I liked how you pointed out that there could be many factors for why a child misbehaves in class. I know of a student who was misbehaving in class because he was bored. Once he was given more challenging work in school he no longer misbehaved on a daily basis. I also agree with Julie's point about children not understanding because they may have missed important information being taught. I know this was the case for my brother growing up as he was often pulled from the classroom to receive interventions for a previously taught concept then by the time he returned he had missed the new information taught and the cycle would begin all over again. For years he was performing below grade level and everyone had a hard time figuring out why. When my mom came into his life when he was in second grade she found him a tutor so he would no longer need to be pulled from class and within a year he was testing many grades above his grade level. He learned differently and actually for math he completed all of his math problems mentally which the teachers assumed meant he was copying the answers from others but that is just how his mind works- he can actually do calculus mentally.

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  3. I agree teachers should not get too upset when children start misbehaving, it could be out of frustration because they cannot do the assignment. How do teachers clear this frustration from the students? I never thought about the absenteeism can influence the way they perform in school also. Thanks for bring that point up.

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