Standard Assessment Procedures
It's not ALL standard!
Scoring is my favorite
Rating Test Quality
Helpful to remember
100

Naming the disorder, finding its cause if possible, and describing characteristics.

Diagnosis

100

A recording of the client’s everyday communication skills.

A Speech and Language Sample

100

The range of Standard Scores between 85 and 115 on the Bell Curve distribution.

What is Average?

100

A test measures what it is meant to measure.

Validity

100

The possibility of an adult returning to work in the future is an example.

Prognosis

200

A brief procedure that helps determine the need for further assessment in more detail.

Screening

200

Three examples are Rating scales, Questionnaires, and Developmental inventories.

Informal Assessments

200

The average performance of a typical group of people based on age levels.

Norms

200

The test yields similar scores for the same individuals upon repeated testing.

Reliability

200

A measure of target behaviors in the absence of treatment or before treatment has begun.

Baseline Data / Establishing Baselines

300

Includes prior assessment and treatment, family communication patterns and home environment, Prenatal, birth and development details, info about illness, trauma and treatment in the past, education, and occupation.

The Case History

300

An evaluation of a client’s daily communication skills in a naturalistic context that is especially important for clients who cannot express their basic needs.

Functional Assessment

300

The actual scores earned on a test.

Raw scores

300

Consistency of measures when the same test is administered to the same person twice.

Test-Retest Reliability

300

Respect, trust, and a harmonious relationship between the clinician and the family (Pindzola et al., 2016).

Rapport

400

Set to 20 or 25 dB HL for 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 Hz.

Settings for an Audiometer / Hearing Screening

400

Performance is evaluated against a standard of performance, eg. 80% accuracy is acceptable.

Criterion-referenced testing

400

The chronological age for which a given raw score is the mean in the standardized sample.

Age Equivalency

400

A measure of internal consistency of a test, where the first half of the test correlates with the second half of the test.

Split-half Reliability

400

Use age-appropriate conversation topics, ask primarily open-ended questions, and allow enough periods of silence to encourage the client to initiate speech.

Ways to obtain a Speech-Language Sample

500

Standard evaluation of the oral and facial structures to identify any structural abnormalities that may affect speech production.

An Oral Mech / Orofacial Exam

500

 Evaluating the child’s ability to learn with a test-teach-retest format.

Dynamic Assessment

500

A measure of the percentage of subjects who scored at or below a specific raw score.

Percentile

500

Consistency of measures when two forms of the same test are administered to the same person.

Alternate-form Reliability

500

Using knowledge of the speaker's dialect to determine whether the differences found in the lang sample are disorders or culturally appropriate. (McGregor et al., 1997)

Contrastive Analysis

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