1 / 55

Considerations in Selecting Developmental Screening and Assessment Measures

Considerations in Selecting Developmental Screening and Assessment Measures. Laurie Ford Dept. of Educational & Counselling Psychology & Special Education- UBC Mary Stewart Infant Development Program Early Childhood Education- UBC Early Childhood Assessment Conference

kimberlyb
Download Presentation

Considerations in Selecting Developmental Screening and Assessment Measures

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Considerations in Selecting Developmental Screening and Assessment Measures Laurie Ford Dept. of Educational & Counselling Psychology & Special Education- UBC Mary Stewart Infant Development Program Early Childhood Education- UBC Early Childhood Assessment Conference Vancouver, BC - May 21, 2009

  2. Objectives for the Session • Review a framework for selecting a screening and /or assessment tools • Discuss the important considerations when selecting a screening or assessment tool • Discuss common assessment terms • Discuss types of assessments • Critical evaluation of screening and assessment tools commonly used in ECE.

  3. Getting to Know You In partners: • Introduce yourself • Where you are from and what work you do. • What is one question you want answered from this workshop. After 5 minutes: • Introduce your partner to the group and list your question.

  4. Evaluation Who uses developmental screening tools on a regular basis? What screening or assessment tools are used?

  5. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 1. Screening and assessment should be viewed as services- as part of the intervention process and not only as a means of identification and measurement.

  6. Screening Diagnostic assessment

  7. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 2. Processes, procedures and instruments intended for screening and assessment should only be used for their specific purpose.

  8. What is assessment? • Why do we do assessments with children in our programs?

  9. Assessment Methods • Observation • Children • Children and Adults • Informal and structured interviews • with children • with parents and child care providers • Rating scales or questionnaires • Direct Assessment

  10. Screening Assessment Diagnostic Assessment

  11. Screening Screening is a brief evaluation to identify which children need further more in-depth assessment

  12. Screening Sensitivity:Ability of the test to correctly identify children with developmental delay Specificity:Ability of the test to correctly identify children without developmental delays

  13. Assessment Assessmnt Assessment is the process of obtaining information for the purposes of making evaluative decisions. To identify child and family strengths and need and to propose strategies for intervention.

  14. Assessment Norm- referenced • Focus on comparing a child’s performance to other children (their relative development) Criterion-referenced • Identify what skills a child has and had not yet developed (compared to themselves)

  15. Diagnostic Assessment Diagnostic approaches tend to identify whether a children have significant symptoms of certain conditions

  16. Standardized The standard materials used in each situation. The standard method of presentation of materials in each situation

  17. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 3. Multiple sources of information should be included in screening and assessment

  18. Multiple sources

  19. Child in Different Environments

  20. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 4. Developmental screening should take place on a recurrent or periodic basis. It is inappropriate to screen young children only once during their early years. Similarly, provisions should be made for reevaluation or reassessment after services have been made.

  21. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 5. Developmental screening should be viewed as only one path to more in-depth assessment. Failure to qualify for services based on a single source of screening information should not become a barrier to further evaluation for intervention services if other risk factors (e.g. environment, medical, familial) are present.

  22. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 6. Screening and assessment procedures should be reliable and valid.

  23. Assessment • Reliability:how reliably an instrument or rater measures a variable • Validity:the degree to which a test measures what it is intends to measure

  24. Assessment What population was this test “normed” on?

  25. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 7. Family members should be an integral part of the screening and assessment process. Information provided by family members is critically important for determining whether or not to initiate more in-depth assessment and for designing appropriate intervention strategies. Parents should be accorded complete informed consent at all stages of the screening and assessment process.

  26. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 8. During screening or assessment of developmental strengths and problems, the more relevant and familiar the tasks and setting are to the child and the child’s family, the more likely it is that the results will be valid.

  27. Which “shoe” will child know?

  28. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 9. All tests, procedures and processes for screening or assessment must be culturally sensitive.

  29. Guidelines for screening and assessment(Miesels and Provence, 1989) 10. Extensive and comprehensive training is needed by those who screen and assess very young children.

  30. Some Common Screening Tools • Ages & Stages Questionaire (ASQ) • Parkyn Screen • Nipissing District Developemental Screen (NDDS) • Denver-II • Developmental Indicators of the Activities for Learning (DIAL-3) • Early Screening Inventory- Revised (ESI-R) • Brigance Screening

  31. Ages & Stages Questionnaire (ASQ) • Squires, Potter, & Bricker (1999) • Publisher: Paul H. Brookes • Caregiver Report is the informant • Families and children between the ages of 4 and 60 months

  32. Ages & Stages Questionnaire (ASQ) Training Administration & Scoring Requirements: Questionairres are written at a 6th grade reading level Each questionairre takes about 15 minutes to complete Interpretation must be done by professionals or para professionals Training materials provided in Users Guide and extra video is also available No adaptation for individuals with disabilities

  33. Ages & Stages Questionnaire- Social Emotional (ASQ-SE) Can be administered by parents, child care providers, and preschool teachers. If parents, staff should train parents Designed to compliment the ASQ by providing information on social-emotional functioning for children 3 months to 66 months

  34. Nipissing District Developmental Screen (NDDS) • 13 versions (1 month to 6 years) • Number of items 4 to 22 • Vision, hearing, speech-language, gross motor, fine motor, cognitive, self-help • English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese • Developed in Ontario during the mid 90s

  35. Early Screening Inventory- Revised (ESI-R) • Examines development in three major areas: • Visual-Motor/Adaptive • Language and Cognition • Gross Motor • Examine in each each area but you also get a total score

  36. Early Screening Inventory- Revised (ESI-R) • Brief developmental screening instrument that is individually administered to children ages 3 to 6 years. • Designed to identify children who may be in need of special services to perform successfully upon school entry • ESI-P: Preschool Version 3 yrs-4 yrs 6 mos • ESI-K: Kindergarten Version 4 yrs 5mos -5 yrs 6 mos.

  37. Early Screening Inventory- Revised (ESI-R) • Visual-Motor/Adaptive • Fine Motor • Eye Hand Coordination • Short term Memory • Language & Cognition • Language comprehension • Verbal Expression • Reason & Count • Auditory Sequences • Gross Motor

  38. Common Developmental Assessment Tools • Cognitive - Level C • Bayley Scales of Infant Development- 2nd Edition • Stanford-Binet Scales of Intelligence - 5th Edition • Wecshler Preschool & Primary Scale of Intelligence - 3rd Edition • Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children - 2nd Edition • Leiter - Revised ? Others you have seen ?

  39. Bayley Scales of Infant Development - 2nd Edition • Designed for children from birth to 3 years, 6 months • Includes a mental and a motor scale • The mental scale measures cognitive, sensory, and early language skills but just gives you an overall score

  40. Common Developmental Assessment Tools • Language Tests • Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test - 4th Ed • Expressive Vocabulary Test • Bracken Basic Concept Scale-Revised • Multiple Domain Tests • Mullen Scales of Early Learning • Battelle Developmental Inventory - 2nd Ed

  41. Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test - 4th Edition • Used with a wide age range starting at 2 years, 6 months to 90+ • Best thought of as measure of receptive language. • The child has to point to the correct of 4 pictures. • Used by psychologists and speech-language pathologists

  42. Battelle Developmental Inventory, 2nd Edition Jean Newborg Riverside Publishing/Nelson Canada

  43. Adaptive Domain Personal-Social Domain Communication Domain Motor Domain Cognitive Domain Self-Care Personal Responsibility Adult Interaction Peer Interaction Self-Concept and Social Role Receptive Communication Expressive Communication Gross Motor Fine Motor Perceptual Motor Attention and Memory Reasoning and Academic Skills Perception and Concepts Domains and Sub-domains of the BDI2

  44. Some Common Criterion Referenced Assessment Tools • Gessell • Brigance Diagnostic Inventory of Early Development- Revised • Assessment, Evaluation, and Programming System (AEPS) • Hawaii Early Learning Profile (HELP) • Others?

More Related