1 / 42

Introduction to Psychological Assessment of Children

Introduction to Psychological Assessment of Children . Gregg Selke, Ph.D. PSY 4930 October 3, 2006. Purpose of Psych. Assessment. Goal Driven Broad Screening versus Focused/Problem-Specific Diagnostic Differential and Comorbid Conditions Therapy Oriented Identify target problems

cara
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Psychological Assessment of Children

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. Introduction to Psychological Assessment of Children Gregg Selke, Ph.D. PSY 4930 October 3, 2006

  2. Purpose of Psych. Assessment Goal Driven • Broad Screening versus Focused/Problem-Specific • Diagnostic • Differential and Comorbid Conditions • Therapy Oriented • Identify target problems • Develop preliminary intervention plan • Progress evaluation • How well are ongoing interventions working?

  3. Testing vs. Assessment • Both involve • Identifying areas of concern • Collecting data • Psychological Testing • Administering tests • Focuses solely on collection of data • Psychological Assessment • More broad goals • Involves several clinical tools • Uses clinical skill to interpret data and synthesize results

  4. Psychological Testing • Require standardized procedures for behavior measurement • Consistency and use of the same • Item content • Administration procedures • Scoring criteria • Designed to reduce personal differences and biases of examiners and other external influences on the child’s performance

  5. Psychological Assessment • Main types of assessment • Norm-referenced tests • Interviews • Observations • Informal assessment procedures • Non-norm referenced tests

  6. Norm-Referenced Tests • Tests that are standardized on a clearly defined group • Normative versus clinical reference groups • Goal: quantify the child’s functioning • Scores represent a rank within the comparison group • Examples • Intelligence • Academic skills • Neurocognitive skills • Motor skills • Behavioral and emotional functioning

  7. Norm-Referenced Tests • Psychometric properties • Demographically representative standardization sample • Reliability • Internal consistency, test-retest stability • Validity • Correlation with other tests measuring same construct • Ecological • Psychological tests are imperfect • Examiner, the child, and the environment can affect responses and scores

  8. “Normal” or “Bell” curve • Most attempt to be normally distributed • Standard deviation: Commonly used measure of the extent to which scores deviate from the mean • In a Normal distribution, 68% of cases fall between 1 SD above the mean and 1 SD below the mean • The threshold for meeting “clinical significance” varies across tests, typically > 1 to 2 SDs above or below mean

  9. Norm-Referenced Tests • Percentile ranks • Determines child’s position relative to the comparison group • Example: What does it mean when a child is in the 35th %tile on an Intelligence test?? • Age-Equivalent and Grade-Equivalent scores • Frequently used on academic achievement tests • Sometimes questionable validity

  10. Variables Affecting Test Scores • Demand characteristics • Child may give a certain type of response in order to obtain a desired outcome • Response bias • Child’s response to one item may influence how they respond to subsequent items • Social desirability • Tendency to present one’s self in a positive light

  11. Variables Affecting Test Scores • Misinterpretation of Items • Misunderstanding directions • Format of instructions • Oral vs. written • Response format • True-false, written, oral, timed, untimed • Setting variables • Location, time of day, medication status • Previous testing experience • Practice effects

  12. Variables Affecting Test Scores • Reactive effects • Assessment procedure affects responses • Timed, anxiety provoking • Examiner-examinee variables • Individual characteristics may affect responses (e.g., gender, age, warmth) • Research suggests that children of low SES and/or ethnic minorities are more affected by examiner characteristics • Familiar vs. unfamiliar examiner

  13. Administering Tests • Administering psychological tests to children requires specific skills • Flexibility: breaks, time to warm up, establishing rapport • Vigilance: attend to child’s behavior while still correctly administering the test • Self-awareness: how do children typically react to your style, body language, mannerisms

  14. Examiner Nonverbal Behavior

  15. Other Testing Issues • Introducing yourself to child • Explaining what the child will be doing • Letting them know where their parent will be during the assessment • Providing adequate expectations • Developmental considerations • Younger children • Older children • Praising effort NOT performance • Setting limits on behavior

  16. Establishing Rapport • “the sense of mutual trust and harmony that characterizes a good relationship” • Good rapport = • child/family perceives the clinician as caring, interested, competent, and trustworthy • Clinician feels positive regard, genuineness, and empathy • Necessary condition

  17. Establishing Rapport • Use of communication skills • Acknowledgements • Descriptive Statements • Reflections • Praise • Periodic Summaries • Elaboration • Clarification

  18. Establishing Rapport • Avoid: • Lack of interest or not attending • Sarcasm • Lecturing • Interrupting • Commands • No eye contact • Criticisms

  19. Interviewing • Types of interviews: • Unstructured—allow child/parent to “tell their story” • Semi-structured—provide flexible guidelines, a starting point • Structured—most often used to make diagnoses or in research studies, standardized • May interfere with rapport • Does not provide info on family interactions or a functional analysis of behavior • Which types of interview require the most clinical skill??

  20. Explaining Confidentiality • Parents sign releases of information • Review concept of confidentiality and its limits early in clinical interaction • Limits to confidentiality: • Specific threat to someone else (homicidal ideation) • Self-harm is threatened (suicidal plan/intent) • Sexual and physical abuse (history or current) • Insurance requests • Courts • Generally referral source

  21. Interviewing Techniques • Establishing rapport is crucial • Moving from open-ended to closed-ended questions (general to specific) • Tell me about why you’re here today? • What about school is most difficult for you? • Are you failing math because you didn’t hand in your homework….not studying……didn’t understand the material? • Avoid • Double-barreled questions (“and”, “or”) • Long, multiple questions • Leading questions • Psychological jargon

  22. Example Developmental Interview • History of presenting problem • Prenatal, perinatal, and early postnatal history • Medical history • Acquisition of age-related milestones • School history • Personality, social, emotional, behavioral history • Family history • Expectations about assessment visit

  23. Example Developmental Interview • History of presenting problem • Parental description of problem • Child’s view of problem • Onset • Duration • Interventions attempted • Prior assessments • Parents sense of effects of problem, and sense of child’s understanding

  24. Example Developmental Interview • Prenatal, perinatal, and early postnatal history • Pregnancy • Labor and delivery • Birth weight • Apgar scores • Complications post-birth

  25. Example Developmental Interview • Medical history • Across all ages • Accidents & injures • Major illnesses • Ear infections • Neurological conditions • Congenital and genetic conditions • Hearing and eyesight

  26. Example Developmental Interview • Acquisition of age-related milestones • Motor • Language • Toileting • School history • Preschool experiences to present – Settings • Achievement, grades, strengths and weaknesses • Behavioral, emotional, social functioning • IEPs, 504 Plans, accommodations, modifications • What teachers think

  27. Example Developmental Interview • Personality, social, emotional/mood, behavioral history across development • Temperament as an infant and toddler • 2.5-5 years: Development of play, aggression, interests • 5-11 years: Hobbies, activities, friendships, family relationships • 11 to adolescence: Development of interest in opposite sex, dating and sex, activities, drug and alcohol use, family relationships, self-concept, goals and aspirations

  28. Example Developmental Interview • Family history • Parental history: marriage(s), # children • Demographics, ages, education, occupation, SES • Siblings: ages, problems, school history • Medical, genetic, developmental, psychological, abuse problems • Expectations about assessment visit

  29. Developmental Considerations • Young children tend to think in concrete ways, while teens may reflects more on feelings and motivations • While age is an obvious indicator of developmental level, language and cognitive levels may also vary with age • Interview format should be adjusted to the individual child’s level • Open vs. Closed questions

  30. Developmental Considerations • 6 year olds might be asked about the difference between preschool and kindergarten • Young teens might be asked about the transition to individualized school schedules and homework, and peer pressures. • Older teens might be asked about college, vocational plans, or separating from parents

  31. Format of the Interview • Who will be interviewed is often a question with young patients • e.g., Children under 6 typically are generally interviewed with parents, then sometimes parents are seen alone • e.g., Older children and adolescents are often seen as a family first and then later may be interviewed alone • Sex abuse may be an exception

  32. Format of the Interview • If the clinicians sees family together it allows for: • Observation of interactional patterns • Areas of agreement and disagreement • Tell family how their time will be structured • Allow them to know if they can save sensitive topics for when they are alone

  33. Closing the Interview • Summarize what has been learned • Make sure you understand what the interviewee has reported • Helps determine what additional information might be needed • Ask the child/family if they have questions • “Is there anything else I didn’t ask about that you think it would be important for me to know?”

  34. Behavioral Observations • Psychological assessments always include observations about the patient’s behavior during the assessment • Collected throughout the assessment • Areas assessed/observed: • Orientation (person, place, time) • General appearance and behavior • Gait, posture, dress, personal hygiene, activity level • Speech and thought • Coherence, speed, open vs. guarded

  35. Behavioral Observations • General response style • Mood and affect • Euthymic vs. dysthymic • Labile, blunted, etc. • Reactions to being evaluated • Response to encouragement • Attitude towards self • Unusual habits, mannerisms, vocalizations

  36. Behavioral Observations • How child relates to parent? • How child relates to examiner? • How child reacts to test materials or toys? • Is the child age appropriate in behavior? • How is the child’s concentration?

  37. Behavioral Observations • Are tantrums seen? • Does the child cooperate? • What is the extent of child’s responses? • short vs. elaborate • How is the child’s speech and language development?

  38. Informal Assessment • Self-monitoring records • Report cards • Personal documents • Diaries, poems, stories • Role playing

  39. Multimodal Assessment • Obtaining information from several sources • Integrate information from several sources • Recognize limitations of any one source • Using several assessment methods • Assessing several areas of functioning • Strengths and weaknesses

  40. Interpreting Results • Are test results congruent with other information obtained? • How can you account for discrepancies in teacher, parent, child reports? • Do findings appear to be reliable and valid? • INTEGRATING results from multiple sources is a critical clinical skill

  41. Final Steps in Assessment • Develop intervention strategies and recommendations • Write a report • Provide feedback • Follow-up

  42. Key Ingredients • Successful assessment requires knowledge of: • Psychological tests • Psychopathology • Interviewing • Statistics • Development • Hypothesis testing • Your self

More Related