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Life Skills Assessment SpEd 556
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Life Skills Assessment

Jan 02, 2016

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Life Skills Assessment. SpEd 556. Norm-Referenced Tests. Norm-Referenced Tests Compare an individual’s performance to the performance of his or her peers Emphasis is on the relative standing of individuals rather than on absolute mastery of content - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Life Skills Assessment

Life Skills Assessment

SpEd 556

Page 2: Life Skills Assessment

Norm-Referenced Tests• Norm-Referenced Tests

– Compare an individual’s performance to the performance of his or her peers

– Emphasis is on the relative standing of individuals rather than on absolute mastery of content

– Designed to separate the performances of individuals so that there is a distribution of scores

Page 3: Life Skills Assessment

Norm-Referenced Tests• Useful for eligibility decisions

• Students with DCD– Measures of intellectual functioning– Measures of adaptive behavior

Page 4: Life Skills Assessment

Criterion-Referenced Tests• Rather than indicating a person’s relative

standing in skill development--measure a person’s development of particular skills in term of absolute levels of mastery

• Recommended for the purpose of assisting in planning appropriate programs for children

• Identifies the specific skills that the student does or does not have (mastery)

Page 5: Life Skills Assessment

Criterion-Referenced Tests• Information obtained from criterion-

referenced tests facilitate the writing of objectives

• Test items sample sequential skills--identifying where to begin instruction and to understand the instructional sequence

Page 6: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Assessments• Brigance Diagnostic Inventory of

Basic Skills• Brigance Diagnostic Inventory of

Essential Skills• Brigance Diagnostic Life Skills

Inventory• Brigance Diagnostic Employability

Skills Inventory

Page 7: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Diagnostic Comprehensive Inventory of Basic

Skills• Assessment of 203 skill

sequences in: • Readiness• Speech• Listening• Reading• Spelling• Writing• Research and study

skills• Graphs & Maps• Math

• Primarily used to:– Assess elementary and

middle school students• Prekindergarten to grade

nine

– Assess basic academic skills

• Measurement is:– Criterion-referenced

• Focus on the content rather than comparison to others

Page 8: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Basic SkillsMath Skills

• Grade placement• Numbers• Number facts• Computation

• Fractions• Decimals• Percents• Time• Money• Measurement

Page 9: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Basic SkillsInventory may be used as:• Assessment Instrument

– Identify areas of strength and weakness

– To identify basic skills within areas

– Identify instructional objectives

• Instructional guide– Objectives stated in functional

and measurable terms

• Record-keeping and Tracking System

• The instrument:– Gives continuity to

your program of basic skills

– Simplifies and combines the processes of assessing, diagnosing, record-keeping, and instructional planning

Page 10: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Diagnostic Inventory of Basic Skills

• Administration– Too extensive to be

administered in its entirety

– Decide what assessment will provide the most valuable data within reasonable time

– Initiate assessment at the skill level where student can be successful (refer to grade levels in manual)

• Student Record Book– Color coding

• Ongoing, graphic, specific, and easily interpreted record (see overheads)

Page 11: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Diagnostic Inventory of Essential

Skills

Page 12: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Inventory of Essential Skills

• Two parts--– Section A through T--basic academic skills– Sections U through Z--applied skills– Applied Skills

• Health & Safety• Vocational• Money & Finance• Travel & Transportation• Food & Clothing• Oral Communication & Telephone Skills

Page 13: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Inventory of Essential Skills

• Includes:– 186 skill sequences– 10 rating scales

• Easy to follow format

• Has two forms (A&B)

• Easily adapted to accommodate different assessment situations

Page 14: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Diagnostic Life Skills Inventory

Albert H. Brigance

Curriculum Associates, Inc.

Page 15: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Life Skills Inventory

• Areas assessed:– Listening– Speaking– Reading – Writing– Comprehending– Computing

• Within context of everyday life situations

Page 16: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Life Skills Inventory

• Subscales– Speaking & listening skills

– Functional Writing Skills

– Words on common signs and warning labels

– Telephone Skills

– Money and finance – Food

– Clothing

– Health

– Travel & transportation

Page 17: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Employability Skills Inventory

Albert H. Brigance

Curriculum Associates, Inc.

Page 18: Life Skills Assessment

Brigance Employability Skills Inventory

• Subscales– Reading grade placement– Career Awareness and Self

Understanding– Job seeking skills & knowledge– Rating scales

• Self concept, attitudes, responsibility, self-discipline, motor coordination, thinking skills, job-interview

– Reading skills (in relation to employment)

– Speaking & listening skills– Preemployment writing– Math skills & concepts

Page 19: Life Skills Assessment

Checklist of Adaptive Living Skills

Page 20: Life Skills Assessment

Checklist of Adaptive Living Skills (CALS)

• Criterion-referenced, individually administered measure (infants to mature adults)

– Tool for program planning• Determine instructional needs

• Develop individualized training objectives

• Monitor progress of learners

• Can be used:– each time the learner’s long-term goals are evaluated– each time learner experiences major change in environment– each time there is need to select new or different skill areas for

evaluation

Page 21: Life Skills Assessment

Checklist of Adaptive Living Skills (CALS)

• 800 specific adaptive behaviors• Four domains

– Personal living skills– Home living skills– Community living skills– Employment skills

• Broad domains subdivided into 24 specific skills modules

• Items arranged in order of progressive difficulty

Page 22: Life Skills Assessment

Life Centered Career Education Batteries

(LCCE)

Don Brolin

Council for Exceptional Children (CEC)

Page 23: Life Skills Assessment

LCCE Knowledge Battery

Page 24: Life Skills Assessment

LCCE Knowledge Battery• Standardized, Criterion-Referenced

Assessment

• Developed to be used with 7-12 grade students

• 200 multiple choice questions that cover 20 of the 22 competencies

• Sample of basic knowledge

Page 25: Life Skills Assessment

LCCE Performance Battery• Nonstandardized, criterion-referenced

instrument

• Assesses 21 of the competencies

• Items are performance based

Page 26: Life Skills Assessment

COACH

Page 27: Life Skills Assessment

Selecting Curriculum Areas

• Communication

• Socialization

• Personal management

• Leisure and Recreation

• Selected Academics

• Home

• School

• Community

• Vocational

Page 28: Life Skills Assessment

Additional Learning Outcomes

• Step 2 designed to identify learning outcomes beyond the priorities selected during the Family Interview (top 8 priorities)

• Additional learning outcomes may come from:– Coach items that were not previously prioritized– General education

Page 29: Life Skills Assessment

General Supports• Step 3 is designed to determine and

document general supports that are necessary for the student to access and participate in his or her individualized education program

• They clarify what other needs to do to or for the student

Page 30: Life Skills Assessment

Scheduling Matrix• The purpose of this step is to explore

scheduling possibilities by comparing the student’s educational program components to general class activities.

Page 31: Life Skills Assessment

Assessment Overview• Brigance Scales

– Assess basic skills, life skills, employability skills (direct assessment with some indirect with rating scales)

• Checklist of Adaptive Behavior (CALS)– Criterion-referenced adaptive behavior assessment (indirect assessment)

• LCCE Batteries– Knowledge Battery-direct assessment of students’ knowledge of like skill

issues– Performance Battery-direct assessment of students’ performance relative

to life skills (with some rating scales)

• COACH– Assessment process that identifies & prioritizes student needs, additional

learning outcomes, and general supports to include addressing how needs can be addressed in the general education classroom