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WISC-V: Clinical Use and Interpretation, Second Edition provides practical information for clinicians on the selection of subtest measures, along with their proper administration and interpretation. Full Scale IQ is identified as important for predicting relevant behaviors and primary index scores for characterizing the child's strengths and weaknesses. Classroom indicators of low scores on each of these abilities are identified, with suggested interventions, accommodations and instructional strategies for low scorers. Coverage includes ethnic differences for the Full Scale IQ and each primary index score, along with evidence of the profound influence of parental attitudes and expectations. Several other societal and contextual factors relevant to understanding racial/ethnic differences are presented. Two chapters review use of the WISC-V for identifying learning disabilities, testing of individuals with dyslexia, and best-practice recommendations to ensure accurate diagnosis and intervention. Concluding chapters describe advances in the Q-interactive system platform allowing administration of the WISC-V on iPads and other tablets, and how clinicians can tailor assessment using select WISC-V subtests and features.
For both experienced psychologists and graduate students, this book
moves quickly through the essentials of WISC-IV interpretation and
onto an insightful analysis of the major cognitive domains assessed
by WISC-IV. It is the intention of the editors to raise the
standard of practice from a simplistic 'test-label-place' model to
a clinical model of assessing to understand and intervene. In the
first chapter, the reader is presented with a comprehensive array
of societal and home environment factors for which there is
empirical evidence indicating their impact on the development of
children s cognitive abilities, and ultimately their scores on
intelligence tests. Subsequent chapters address issues related to
the assessment of cognitive abilities that compose 'g', with
special emphasis on the clinical correlates of working memory and
processing speed from both neuropsychological and cognitive
information processing perspectives. Each new chapter builds on
material presented in previous chapters and progresses the reader
purposefully through deeper levels of understanding of WISC-IV and
cognitive assessment in general. Two chapters explicate the
processing approach to interpretation that is the corner stone of
the WISC-IV Integrated. A further chapter addresses the
interpretation of WISC-IV findings within the context of other
instruments as part of a full psychological evaluation. The final
chapter provides an extensive case example of how to write
psychological evaluation reports from a child-centered rather than
a score-centered perspective that can have transforming impact on
parents and teachers approach to the child. Overall, these four
authors are the architects of a masterful new book on advanced
WISC-IV interpretation from a clinical perspective, Together with
the complimentary book, WISC-IV Clinical Assessment and
Intervention, Second Edition these books provide the complete
spectrum of information needed by all psychologists who use the
WISC-IV in clinical practice.
This book provides users of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-IV) with information on applying the WAIS-IV, including additional indexes and information regarding use in special populations for advanced clinical use and interpretation. The book offers sophisticated users of the WAIS-IV and Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-IV) guidelines on how to enhance the clinical applicability of these tests. The first section of the book provides an overview of the WAIS-IV, WMS-IV, and new Advanced Clinical Solutions for Use with the WAIS-IV/WMS-IV (ACS). In this section, examiners will learn: Normal versus atypical score variabilityLow-score prevalence in healthy adults versus clinical populationsAssessing whether poor performance reflects a decline in function or is the result of suboptimal effort New social cognition measures found in the ACS are also
presented. The second part focuses on applying the topics in the
first section to specific clinical conditions, including
recommended protocols for specific clientele (e.g. using
demographically adjusted norms when evaluating individuals with
brain injury). Common clinical conditions are discussed, including
Alzheimer s disease, mild cognitive impairment, traumatic brain
injury, and more. Each chapter provides case examples applying all
three test batteries and using report examples as they are obtained
from the scoring assistant. Finally, the use of the WAIS-IV/WMS-IV
and the ACS in forensic settings is presented.
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