2nd Testing of The Mentally Retarded Population
2nd Testing of The Mentally Retarded Population
2nd Testing of The Mentally Retarded Population
Mentally Retarded
Population
BY
HAIFA ZAFAR
Definition:
The previous system specified the levels of mental retardation from mild to profound,
based on intelligence test performance.
1. Mild Intellectual Disability:
IQ of 50-55 to 70-75+. Intermittent Support required. Reasonable social and
communication skills; with special education, attain sixth grade level by late teens;
achieve social and vocational adequacy with special training and supervision; partial
independence in living arrangements.
Cont…
Limitations in Adaptive skills are more difficult to confirm than a low IQ.
Fortunately, the AAIDD stipulates specific skills within the three areas of adaptive
functioning, namely:
Conceptual Skills—language and literacy; money, time, and number concepts;
and self-direction.
Social Skills—interpersonal skills, social responsibility, self-esteem, social
problem solving, and the ability to follow rules/obey laws and to avoid being
victimized.
Practical Skills—activities of daily living (personal care), occupational skills,
health care, travel / transportation , schedules/routines, safety, use of money, use
of telephone (www.aamr.org).
Diagnosis:
Vineland
Social
Maturity
Scale
Vineland Social Maturity Scale:
Two of the scales are Interview Editions, whereby information is obtained through a
semi-structured interview with a parent or other care giver.
First Version: one of these versions is the 297-item Survey Form.
Second Version: The other is the 577-item expanded form, which also provides a
systematic basis for preparing individualized educational or treatment programs.
Bothe versions are applicable from birth through 18 years and to low-functioning
adults.
Third Version: the third version is the Classroom Edition, comprising a 244-item
questionnaire to be filled out by a classroom teacher; it covers ages 3 through 12
years.
Cont…
The correlation between the Classroom Edition and Survey Form scores range from .
31 to .54, which indicates that the two should not be used interchangeably.
All versions of the Vineland focus on the individual usually in habitually does, not on
what he or she can do. The items are classified under four major adaptive domains;
these are shown in table of content of the Vineland adaptive behavior scales. Together
with their subdomains and brief descriptions of the behavior covered. Both Interview
Editions also include an optional set of the 32 items dealing with maladaptive or a
desirable behaviors that may interfere with the individual’s functioning. All versions
provide wee-designed forms for reporting results to parents.
Content of the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales:
Socialization
1. Interpersonal Relationship 1. How the individual interacts with others
2. Play and Leisure Time 2. How the individual plays and uses leisure time
3. Coping Skills 3. How the individual demonstrates responsibility and
sensitivity to others
Motor Skills
1. Gross 1. How the individual users arms and legs for movement
2. Fine and coordination
2. How the individuals uses hands and fingers to manipulate
objects
The Classroom Edition was standardized on nearly 3000 children who ranged in
age from 3 years to 12 years 11 months; who were drawn from schools in 38 states;
and who were stratified on the same basis used for the other editions.
Validity and Reliability:
Reliability:
For all editions, the median internal consistency reliability coefficients for the domain
and composite scores are mostly in the high .90s. Undesirably, the reliabilities run
lower for subdomains .80, and they vary widely with age level in content area.
Validity:
Several types of data summarized in the manuals for the three forms contribute to
construct validation.
Motor Development:
Oseretsky test for Motor Proficiency, originally published in Russia in 1923. Other
applications of the Oseretsky Test re found in the testing of children with motor
handicaps, minimal brain dysfunction, or learning disabilities, particularly in
connection with the administration of individualized training programs.
Current Revision of Oseretsky Scale:
The current revision of the Oseretsky scale is the Bruininks-Osertsky Test of Motor
Proficiency (Bruininks, 1978). Requiring 45 to 60 minutes the complete battery
comprises 46 items grouped into 8 subtests. It yields 3 scores:
A gross motor composite measuring of a large muscles of shoulders, trunks, and
legs.
A fine motor composite measuring performance of the small muscles of the
fingers, hands, and forearms;
And a total battery composite.
There is also 14-items Short Form, requiring 15-20 minutes and providing a single
index of general Motor proficiency.
Main Challenges in the Assessment of Mental retardation: