AI Article Synopsis

  • Studies show that becoming proficient in administering and scoring the Wechsler scales is challenging for graduate students, likely due to methodological issues.
  • The research indicates that taking a graduate course in assessment leads to a modest but statistically significant reduction in scoring errors on the WAIS-III and WISC-III tests.
  • The study suggests that past findings showing little to no improvement in scoring proficiency might be influenced by these methodological problems, highlighting a need for better teaching approaches and further research in this area.

Article Abstract

Studies have found that Wechsler scale administration and scoring proficiency is not easily attained during graduate training. These findings may be related to methodological issues. Using a single-group repeated measures design, this study documents statistically significant, though modest, error reduction on the WAIS-III and WISC-III during a graduate course in assessment. The study design does not permit the isolation of training factors related to error reduction, or assessment of whether error reduction is a function of mere practice. However, the results do indicate that previous study findings of no or inconsistent improvement in scoring proficiency may have been the result of methodological factors. Implications for teaching individual intelligence testing and further research are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.100.2.547-555DOI Listing

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