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WISC-Tv Case Study

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The WISC-V is an individually administered, comprehensive clinical instrument for assessing the intelligence of children ages 6 years to 16 years, 11 months old. Bob’s performance was compared to children of his same age on a national level. The WISC-V produces a Full Scale Intelligence Quotient (FSIQ) composite score that represents Bob’s global ability. The FSIQ composite score is derived from seven subtests and summarizes ability across a diverse set of cognitive functions. Bob’s FSIQ score falls within the Average (SS:105) range when compared to children of the same age. Bob performs at approximately the same level in all of these areas, there is no variability between his FSIQ and index scores. Therefore, it is believed to be a true representation of his ability, as compared to typical developing peers. Additionally, ten subtests of the WISC-V contributed to the index scores, which represent intellectual functioning in five cognitive areas: Verbal Comprehension (VCI), Visual Spatial (VSI), Fluid Reasoning (FRI), Working Memory (WMI), and Processing Speed (PSI).

Bob’s VCI score falls within the Average (SS: 103) …show more content…
FRI measures Bob’s ability to detect the underlying conceptual relationship among visual objects and use reasoning to identify and apply rules. On the first subtest, Matrix Reasoning, Bob was required to view an incomplete pattern and select the response option that completed the matrix. Bob attempted to use two fingers to point, one finger pointed to his response and one finger on the model. The examiner retaught Bob the appropriate way to display his answer. On the second subtest, Figure Weights, Bob was required to view a scale with a missing weight(s) and identify the response option that would keep the scale balanced. Bob's performance on the subtests within the FRI showed no significant variability, as both scores fall within the Average

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