Flanagan, D. P.,
Ortiz, S. O., Alfonso, V. C. & Dynda, A. (2014). Cognitive
Assessment: Progress in Psychometric Theories, the Structure of Cognitive
Tests, and Approaches to Test Interpretation. In D. Saklofske, V.
Schwean, & C. Reynolds (Eds.), Oxford handbook of psychological assessment
of children and adolescents. New York: Oxford University Press. http://static.squarespace.com/static/53f6762ae4b02e1724aa7c77/t/542e1e62e4b0bfd43274ee36/1412308578489/Flanagan_et_al_in_Saklofske.pdf
This chapter reviews
the development of intelligence theories and especially psychometric approaches. It also reviews the changes made to intelligence tests according to the theoretical developments, and mentions the current efforts to
link psychometric approaches and cognitive theories.
Flanagan and her colleagues
also write about the relations between cognitive abilities and reading, writing
and math.
One thing I've learned
from reading about cognitive-achievement relations is that findings about the
relations between cognitive abilities and reading, writing and math are
dependent upon the specific tests used to measure reading, writing, math and
the cognitive abilities. That's why the
conclusions that can be drawn from studies are often limited to the
specific tests used in them. If, for
instance, reading comprehension is measured by tests that don't require making
inferences from the text, there's no wonder that no relation is found between
reading comprehension and fluid ability.
The XBA – CROSS BATTERY
ANALYSIS approach developed by Flanagan and her colleagues is reviewed towards
the end of the chapter. These researchers
classified more than 700 tests and subtests according to the CHC broad and narrow
abilities they measure. The classification
was done according to research results and expert consensus. When the intelligence test being used in an assessment does not measure certain CHC
abilities, the XBA approach delineates a way to assess these abilities (by using tests classified as measuring these abilities
from other intelligence tests), according to
specific rules.
One interesting thing I found in this chapter is a suggested
classification of WISC4 subtests in three ways:
according to the Luria theory (PASS –
PLANNING, ATTENTION, SIMULTANEOUS, SUCCESSIVE), according to neuropsychological domains (sensory
– motor, speed and efficiency, attention, visual-spatial and detail, auditory
verbal, memory and learning, executive functions and language), and according to broad and narrow
CHC abilities. The classification
according to neuropsychological domains is based on neuropsychological texts
the authors read.
More on PASS theory and it's manifestations in
KABC test can be found in the presentation "a very brief introduction to
intelligence theories" – the first of the presentation series
"intelligence and cognitive abilities" found in the right hand column
of this blog. In this presentation
you'll also find an analysis of the KABC test from cognitive and psychometric
points of view, and Woodcock, Schneider and McGrew's suggestions for combining
psychometric and cognitive theories.
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