Refliction
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Chapter 4
Assessment of Young Children with Special Needs
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What is Assessment?
Assessment is an integral component of early intervention (EI) and early childhood special education (ECSE) services for children birth through age eight with known or suspected disabilities.
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Assessment
“The process of gathering information for decision making” (McLean, Wolery, and Bailey, 2004)
“A flexible, collaborative decision-making process in which teams comprised of families and professionals repeatedly revise their judgments and make decisions” (Bagnato and Neisworth, 1991)
Assessment
“A multi-level process, beginning with screening procedures and continuing through diagnosis, planning of intervention, and program monitoring and evaluation” (Richard and Schiefelbusch 1991)
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Assessment Purposes
Assessment information is gathered to be used in making a decision in one or more of the following areas:
Screening
Eligibility
Program planning
Progress monitoring and evaluation
“Assessment, planning, intervention, and evaluation are overlapping activities”
McCormick (1997)
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Linked Assessment Process
Screening: Is further assessment needed?
Eligibility: Is the child eligible for early childhood special education services?
Program Planning: What are the child’s educational needs and baseline skills?
Progress Monitoring: Is the child making progress over time?
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General Assessment Considerations
Multidisciplinary Team: The involvement of two or more professionals from different disciplines in EI/ECSE activities
Transdisciplinary Team: Type of model used in EI/ECSE
Composed of family members and professionals representing a variety of disciplines
Addresses specific assessment questions
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Assessment Instruments
Different types of tests implemented, depending on the purpose of the assessment
Standardized tests administered during formal testing
Standardized testing instrument
The individual child’s performance or behavior that is exhibited while putting specific skills into action
Interpreted in relation to the performance of a “norming” group
A group of peers of the same age group who have taken the same test
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Norm-Referenced Tests
Provide a score that is relative to other children in a particular group
Advantages
Compare children to other children of the same age for eligibility purposes, report reliability and validity information
Can usually be administered in a short period of time
Disadvantages
Administration of the tests usually take place in an unfamiliar setting rather than the natural environment
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Criterion-Referenced Assessments
Determine whether a child’s performance meets an established criteria or a certain level of mastery within various developmental domains
Strengths
- They offer a continuum of skills linked to the curriculum
Limitations
Time-consuming to administer
May include items that are not appropriate or functional for children
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Curriculum-Based Assessments
Similar to criterion-referenced measures
Curriculum-referenced instruments are used to interpret a child’s performance in relation to specific curriculum content
Reliability refers to the consistency or dependability of an assessment instrument
Important for making generalizations about children’s learning and development
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Validity
Extent to which an assessment instrument measures what it was designed to measure
Five types
Content validity: Refers to how well the test represents the content it purports to measure
Instructional validity: The extent to which the information gained from an assessment instrument would be useful in planning intervention programs for young children with delays or disabilities
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Validity
Construct validity: Focuses on the degree to which a test addresses the constructs on which it was based
Concurrent validity: Concerned with how well a test correlates with other accepted measures of performance administered close in time to the first
Predictive validity: Focuses on the extent to which a test relates to some future measure of performance
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Authentic Assessment
The process of observing, recording, collecting, and otherwise documenting what children do and how they do it for the purpose of making educational or intervention decisions
- Observational Assessment
- Play-based Assessment
- Interviews
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Considerations and Cautions in the Assessment of Young Children
Developmental domains: The key areas typically addressed in comprehensive assessments of young children
Most assessment instruments for young children seek to measure development in one or more of the interrelated skill domains:
Cognitive skills – Social skills
Motor skills – Adaptive skills
Communication skills
Problems with Traditional Assessment Practices
The problems associated with the use of intelligence tests for young children
The limited number of appropriate instruments for young children with delays or disabilities
The nature and characteristics of young children and families
The cultural bias and lack of cultural sensitivity in traditional assessment procedures
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Inappropriate Use of Intelligence Tests with Young Children
Intelligence test: Standardized measure of intellectual functioning
There is an over-reliance on intelligence tests.
Professionals who are responsible for assessment may be unfamiliar with more appropriate ways to determine a true estimate of the abilities of young children (Mclean, Wolery, & Bailey, 2004).
An extensive amount of time is required to conduct a thorough assessment using authentic measures (e.g., observations, family interviews) across multiple settings (e.g., home or school).
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Limitations of Assessment Instruments for Young Children with Disabilities
Assessment Problem
Relatively small number of assessment instruments available that are appropriate for young children with disabilities
Most standardized tests are designed for children experiencing typical development and will not reflect the abilities and needs of children with disabilities.
Effective Assessment
Rely on sensitivity to the age of the child and the nature of the child’s disability or delay.
Characteristics of Young Children and Their Families
- The nature and characteristics of young children can be particularly challenging during the assessment process.
- Assessment results will be more accurate if testers allow time for children to become familiar with them.
- In addition, familiar surroundings may help children feel more at ease and yield a more accurate portrayal of their abilities.
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Cultural Issues
Culturally biased assessment: Measures only skills and abilities valued by the dominant Western culture
Children from non-dominate or non-Western cultures are placed at a unique disadvantage
Professionals must strive for accurate and appropriate assessments of children from diverse backgrounds
Requires attention to the uniqueness of each child’s culture and experience
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Recommended Practices and
Standards for Assessment
The Utility of the Assessment
The Acceptability of the Assessment
The Authenticity of Assessments
Collaboration in the Assessment Process
Convergence of Assessment Information
Equity
Sensitivity of Assessment
Congruence
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Guidelines for Assessing Children
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Guidelines for Assessing Children
Screening Young Children
- Screening is an assessment procedure designed to determine, from within a large population of children, those who need to be referred for further assessment in one or more areas of development
- A screening procedure may last anywhere from five to fifteen minutes
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Screening Young Children
- The screening process begins immediately following birth.
- One of the first screenings experienced by infants and their families is the Apgar Scale
- Infants are screened at one-minute and five- minute intervals following their birth in the following areas: (a) heart rate, (b) respiration, (c) reflex response, (d) muscle tone, and (e) color)
Screening Young Children
- Blood and urine tests are additional routine procedures used to detect metabolic disorders such as phenylketonuria (PKU), referred to as a PKU screening.
- The levels of sensitivity and specificity measure the screening tool’s validity, which tells us the extent to which a test measures what it says it measures.
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Determining Eligibility for Services
Eligibility Criteria
For early primary-level children, the IDEA 1997 allowed for the developmental delay eligibility category to be extended to age nine, if states desire
Eligibility Procedures and Instruments
Recommended practice suggests that no major decision about child’s eligibility should be made solely on the results of a single test
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Assessment for Program Planning in Early Childhood Special Education
- To make an accurate appraisal of the child’s strengths and needs, assessment for program planning purposes should focus on the whole child within the context of the natural environment (e.g., home, child care, preschool, or school settings).
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Assessment for Program Planning in Early Childhood Special Education
- Program planning assessment is an ongoing process that focuses on children’s skill levels, needs, backgrounds, experiences, and interests, as well as the family’s preferences and priorities.
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Family Involvement in the Assessment Process
- “Top-down” or “outcome- driven” model suggests using family-identified outcomes for the child as the starting point of the assessment.
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Family Involvement in the Assessment Process
- Assessment information should be collected from families on an ongoing basis, should be an integral part of the planning process, and should be a collaborative effort; therefore, it is essential for families to develop trust and be confident that the assessment process will maintain privacy and confidentiality.
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Naturalistic Assessment
Also referred to as ecological assessments
Increasingly being used to replace traditional assessment practices for young children with delays or disabilities
The best place to determine if a child has a functional skill is in the environment(s) where he or she uses that skill
A functional skill is a basic skill that is required on a frequent basis in the natural environment
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Progress Monitoring and Program Evaluation
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Progress Monitoring and Program Evaluation
Monitoring Child Progress and Outcomes
Collecting individual, child-focused information can serve as a valuable monitoring tool to provide input about child outcomes and program effectiveness
Variety of methods should be used to ensure a collection of reliable, valid, and useful progress monitoring data
(Branscombe, Castle, Dorsey, Surbeck. & Taylor, 2003; Wolery, 2004)
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Anecdotal Recording
Anecdotal records may entail written notes on specific behaviors, including events that preceded and followed each behavior observed (e.g., skill development for a child in a specific domain, what words a child used during certain activities, and in what situations a child engaged in spontaneous communication).
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Portfolio Assessment
- A portfolio is a systematic and organized record of children’s work and behaviors that is collected at regular intervals that can be used for qualitative comparisons of their knowledge, skills, efforts, and progress over time.
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Overall Program Effectiveness
Program evaluation has been defined as an objective, systematic process for gathering information about a program, or set of activities.
Early childhood special education programs must have well-developed purposes and evaluation plans prior to the beginning of services to increase the programs’ ability to document outcomes.
Chapter Summary
- Assessment of young children with delays or disabilities is a comprehensive process with overlapping components rather than a single procedure.
- Assessment must be useful, acceptable, authentic, collaborative, convergent, equitable, sensitive, and congruent.
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