July 19, 2004

What is educational
testing? What does it
diagnose? How can parent and
teacher use the testing
process to help a struggling
child?
Boston, MA (PRWEB) July 19,
2004 -- When a child is
struggling at school, parents,
teachers and classmates can
also be affected. Knowing when
an evaluation is necessary
requires key information on
when and what type of testing
is appropriate, how it is done
and what the results mean.
Testing results often bring
legal obligations for a school
and school district. Expert
child psychologists, Ellen B.
Braaten PhD and Gretchen
Felopulos, PhD, recently
published “Straight Talk about
Psychological Testing for
Kids,” an informative
guidebook for parents and
educators detailing the
testing process from start to
finish.
“Nearly one in five children
receive some form of
psychological, academic or
intelligence testing each
year,” said Ellen B. Braaten
co-author and psychologist at
Massachusetts General
Hospital. “Every day thousands
of parents are confronting the
possibility that their child
might have a learning
disability or developmental
delay. With dozens of
different tests available,
jargon-filled reports and
complex numerical scores, it’s
often difficult to determine
what the test results really
mean for the child’s future.
Parents and teachers can
wonder how to interpret
results and what course of
action is appropriate.”
Today’s emphasis on ‘No Child
Left Behind’ education
policies, heightened parental
concern, increased budget
constraints and limited
resources can all play a part
in the testing process.
Testing can be a costly route,
a parent or teacher’s decision
can become easier when
equipped with the right
information. Every adult
should know the right
questions to ask, the
differences between types of
testing, the pros and cons of
using a private or public
evaluator, and rights defined
by a child’s Individualized
Education Plan (IEP).
“Straight Talk about
Psychological Testing for
Kids” explains the role
testing plays in diagnosing
and developing treatment plans
for dyslexia, ADHD, math and
reading disorders, and other
childhood problems, including
Asperger syndrome, depression
and anxiety.
The guidebook is an excellent
reference for parents,
teachers, principals, school
psychologists and other
education professionals.
“Sometimes even educators
aren’t exactly sure what
happens during the testing
process and why certain tests
are used,” says Felopulos,
co-author and psychologist at
Harvard Medical School. “Our
book details: when, why, and
how to have a child tested;
what schools can and should
provide; what the numbers say
about IQ, development,
learning disabilities; and,
how to use the results to get
the best help for the child.
“Straight Talk about
Psychological Testing for
Kids” (2004) is published by
Guilford Press and is
available in both hardback and
paperback editions.
http://www.emediawire.com/releases/2004/7/emw141916.htm

For more information visit
www.kidtesting.com or
call 310-289-2149.