Demystifying the Psycho-Educational Assessment Report Suzanne Pellarin, M.A.

Demystifying the
Psycho-Educational Assessment
Report
Suzanne Pellarin, M.A.
Psycho-Educational Consultant, London Catholic District
School Board
What is a Psycho-Educational
Assessment?
• A type of psychological report that focuses on assessment
and interpretation of educationally related psychological
tests and educational tests, including tests of intelligence
and cognitive abilities, memory, achievement tests, and
measures of behaviour.
• It is designed to answer these types of questions:
o Does the student have a learning disability,
developmental disability, attentional problems?
o What are the student’s academic and cognitive
abilities, strengths, and weaknesses?
Southern LINCs
• It yields recommendations relevant for educational planning
and may assist with decisions regarding identification and/or
placement.
• While learning is the primary focus of psycho-educational
assessment, behavioural, socio-emotional, and medical issues
may also need to be addressed in a psycho-educational
assessment.
The Basic Components of
Psycho-Educational Reports
• Background Information
• Assessment Techniques (what tests or checklists were
administered)
• Behavioural Observations
• Cognitive Ability & Memory Skills
• Academic Functioning
• Attention and Behaviour
• Executive Functioning
• Adaptive Functioning
• Conclusions and Recommendations
Cognitive Ability & Memory Skills
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Verbal Comprehension
Short-Term Auditory Memory
Long-Term Verbal Memory and Learning
Working Memory
Perceptual Reasoning (visual-spatial organization,
nonverbal reasoning)
• Visual memory
• Visual-Motor Coordination
• Processing Speed
Academic Functioning
In this section we may refer to achievement testing
completed by the Student Education Resource
Teacher (SERT) and/or our own achievement testing.
Achievement tests are designed to determine the
student’s degree of knowledge and proficiency in a
specific area or set of areas, such as:
• Reading
• Writing
• Math
Attention and Behaviour
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Inattention
Impulsivity/Hyperactivity
Rule-breaking, Opposition, Conduct Problems
Aggression
Anxiety, Depression, Withdrawal
Somatic complaints
Atypicality, Social Problems, Thought Problems
Leadership
Internalizing vs. Externalizing Behaviours
Executive Functioning
• “Executive functions” is a term used to describe
the many different cognitive processes that
students use to control their behavior and to
connect past experience with present action.
• Students rely on executive functions to perform
activities such as planning, organizing,
strategizing, paying attention to and remembering
details, and managing time and space.
LD@school
Adaptive Functioning
• Adaptive functioning or behavior reflects an
individual’s social and practical competence of daily
skills to meet the demands of everyday living.
• Adaptive behavior includes the age-appropriate
behaviors necessary for people to live independently
and to function safely and appropriately in daily life.
Wikipedia
• Adaptive behaviors include real life skills such as
grooming, dressing, safety, safe food handling,
school rules, ability to work, money management,
cleaning, making friends, social skills, and personal
responsibility.
about.com Learning Disabilities
The measurement techniques
used in psychological reports are
norm-referenced and
standardized.
Standardized
• During the standardization process, the test is
given to a large number of students from
various backgrounds to determine what is
average, low average, high average, etc.
• This allows us to compare a child’s scores to
thousands of other students who were part of
the normative sample.
Norm-Referenced
• The scores generated give the student’s
relative standing in a group.
• How does the student compare to others
his age?
• Allows us to make statements like: “Is
average compared to his peers.”
• The EQAO Standardized Tests, Ontario Curriculum,
and PM Benchmarks are not norm-referenced.
• They are criterion referenced.
o Authorities or experts decide what children
should be doing at each grade level.
o Not: What can the average child do.
Norms can be reported as:
• Percentile rank
• Standard score
• IQ
About.com Learning Disabilities
• Percentile Ranks indicate how well a student
performed compared to other students his/her age.
A percentile rank of 50 corresponds to a
performance that is as good as, or better than, 50%
of one’s same-aged peers. Average percentile ranks
fall between 25 and 75.
• Standard Scores compare one student's
performance on a test to the performance
of other students her age. Standard scores
estimate whether a student's scores are
above average, average, or below average
compared to peers. They also enable
comparison of a student's scores on
different types of tests.
• An intelligence quotient, or IQ, is a score derived
from a standardized test designed to assess
intelligence. In most IQ tests, the mean (average)
score within an age group is set to 100 and the
standard deviation SD is 15. (The SD shows how
much variation or exists from the average.)
Possible Outcomes of
Psycho-Educational Assessment
• A Psychological Diagnosis such as,
o Learning Disability
o Developmental Disability
o Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
• No diagnosis
o Terms such as Slow Learner or Gifted are NOT
psychological or diagnostic terms.
o We might suggest another condition or disorder
that it outside of our expertise and suggest further
investigation
Learning Disability Definition
as per the Learning Disabilities Association of Ontario
• “Learning Disabilities” refers to a variety of
disorders that affect the acquisition, retention,
understanding, organization or use of verbal
and/or non-verbal information.
• These disorders result from impairments in one or
more psychological processes related to learning
(a), in combination with otherwise average
abilities essential for thinking and reasoning.
• Learning disabilities are specific not global impairments
and as such are distinct from intellectual disabilities.
• Learning disabilities range in severity and invariably
interfere with the acquisition and use of one or more of
the following important skills:
• oral language (e.g., listening, speaking, understanding)
• reading (e.g., decoding, comprehension)
• written language (e.g., spelling, written expression)
• mathematics (e.g., computation, problem solving)
Learning Disabilities Association of Ontario (LDAO)
What do we mean by Psychological
Processes?
• While performing any kind of activity we use
various processes like thinking, remembering,
problem solving, reasoning etc. When we study a
lesson, watch a movie, talk on a topic, we are
using psychological processes of which we may or
may not be aware.
studymode.com
• Refers to an evolving list of cognitive functions. To
date, research has focused on functions such as:
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phonological processing
memory and attention
processing speed
language processing
perceptual-motor processing
visual-spatial processing
working memory/executive functions
LDAO
Learning Disability Definition
as per the Ontario Ministry of Education
• A learning disorder evident in both academic and
social situations that involves one or more of the
processes necessary for the proper use of spoken
language or the symbols of communication, and that
is characterized by a condition that:
• Is not primarily the result of Impairment of vision;
Impairment of hearing; Physical disability; primary
emotional disturbance; Cultural difference;
• Results in a significant discrepancy between academic
achievement and assessed intellectual ability, with deficits
in one or more of:
Receptive language (listening, reading); Language processing
(thinking, conceptualizing, integrating); Expressive language
(talking, spelling, writing); Mathematical computations.
• May be associated with one or more conditions diagnosed
as:
Perceptual handicap; brain injury, Minimal brain dysfunction,
Dyslexia or Developmental aphasia.
Ontario Ministry of Education
Accommodation
• Changes how the content is
• taught,
• made accessible, and/or
• assessed.
Accommodations DO NOT change what the
student is expected to master. The objectives
of the course/activity remain intact.
Modification
• Also changes how the content is:
• taught,
• made accessible, and/or
• assessed.
Modifications DO change what the student is
expected to master. Course/activity
objectives are modified to meet the needs of
the learner.
Accommodation (examples)
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One-to-one or small group instruction
Extended time on assignments and/or assessments
Braille or large print materials
Shortened assignments and/or assessments
Slant boards or study carrels
Oral administration of subject-area tasks that do not
assess decoding/reading comprehension
• Technologies such as speech-to-text
Modifications (examples)
• Instruction that focuses on selected curriculum
outside of grade level
• Changes in the scoring rubrics or grading scale
• Reducing the complexity of the activity (e.g., only
one step as opposed to multiple steps to solve a
problem)
• Cueing or prompting the student during a grade-level
activity
MODIFICATION = What
ACCOMMODATION = How
Conclusion
We write these reports for parents, teachers,
and even the students themselves in the hopes
that the information will be helpful in
understanding how the student learns and what
strengths you can draw on to circumvent any
processing deficits. When we give
recommendations we are typically thinking of
the student at their current age.
We want the information in our reports to be
helpful throughout their school careers and we
encourage parents, teachers and high school
students to ask for a review of the assessment
report and an update of recommendations at
any time.