The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults

The study investigates .the use of the Bender Gestalt Test (BGT) amongst low-educated adults. Three versions of the BGT are used in this study; the original 'copy' version as well as the 'immediate' and 'delayed'recall versions. This is done so as to expand the ability...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dyall, Kate
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002477
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-2968
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-29682018-06-09T04:06:54ZThe Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adultsDyall, KateBender-Gestalt TestPsychological testsBrain-damaged children -- Psychological testingThe study investigates .the use of the Bender Gestalt Test (BGT) amongst low-educated adults. Three versions of the BGT are used in this study; the original 'copy' version as well as the 'immediate' and 'delayed'recall versions. This is done so as to expand the ability of the BGT to identify neurological impairment and to differentiate between this and functional impairment. A literature review explores the problems of standardization in the administration, scoring and application of all three versions of the test Suggestions are made to correct the problems identified and a novel system of scoring the recall versions are proposed, which allows for the comparison of results of the three versions of the test and which is based on Lacks's (1984) and Weiss's (1970) systems. Administration procedures were also developed to suit the context of the study. The copy, immediate and delayed versions of the BGT were administered to a group of 184 low-educated adults. Statistical analyses revealed significant education effects for the sample tested with regards to both test scores and performance time. The finding of an education effect for performance time is discussed at length, as some literature regards excessive time as a neurological indicator. An anomaly for the group with no education was found to exist, with the scores of these subjects not Significantly different from those with 4-6 years of education. Possible reasons for this were explored. In addition, the findings of this research revealed a plateau effect with those having less than 6 years of education scoring substantially lower than those with 7 years and more. The scores of adults with 7 and more years of education level out with no significant differences between educational levels. This appears to suggest that education effects rather than the developmental maturity level proposed by Koppitz, are involved. In addition, the scores of low-educated adults on the expanded Bender Gestalt Test were significantly lower than those of children with similar educational levels, in other studies. These findings and possible explanations are discussed. The study concludes by suggesting new research areas and emphasizing the urgent need for separate normative data on the expanded BGT for low-educated adults, and the establishment of appropriate 'cut-off' points.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Psychology1996ThesisMastersMA284 pagespdfvital:2968http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002477EnglishDyall, Kate
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Bender-Gestalt Test
Psychological tests
Brain-damaged children -- Psychological testing
spellingShingle Bender-Gestalt Test
Psychological tests
Brain-damaged children -- Psychological testing
Dyall, Kate
The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
description The study investigates .the use of the Bender Gestalt Test (BGT) amongst low-educated adults. Three versions of the BGT are used in this study; the original 'copy' version as well as the 'immediate' and 'delayed'recall versions. This is done so as to expand the ability of the BGT to identify neurological impairment and to differentiate between this and functional impairment. A literature review explores the problems of standardization in the administration, scoring and application of all three versions of the test Suggestions are made to correct the problems identified and a novel system of scoring the recall versions are proposed, which allows for the comparison of results of the three versions of the test and which is based on Lacks's (1984) and Weiss's (1970) systems. Administration procedures were also developed to suit the context of the study. The copy, immediate and delayed versions of the BGT were administered to a group of 184 low-educated adults. Statistical analyses revealed significant education effects for the sample tested with regards to both test scores and performance time. The finding of an education effect for performance time is discussed at length, as some literature regards excessive time as a neurological indicator. An anomaly for the group with no education was found to exist, with the scores of these subjects not Significantly different from those with 4-6 years of education. Possible reasons for this were explored. In addition, the findings of this research revealed a plateau effect with those having less than 6 years of education scoring substantially lower than those with 7 years and more. The scores of adults with 7 and more years of education level out with no significant differences between educational levels. This appears to suggest that education effects rather than the developmental maturity level proposed by Koppitz, are involved. In addition, the scores of low-educated adults on the expanded Bender Gestalt Test were significantly lower than those of children with similar educational levels, in other studies. These findings and possible explanations are discussed. The study concludes by suggesting new research areas and emphasizing the urgent need for separate normative data on the expanded BGT for low-educated adults, and the establishment of appropriate 'cut-off' points.
author Dyall, Kate
author_facet Dyall, Kate
author_sort Dyall, Kate
title The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
title_short The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
title_full The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
title_fullStr The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
title_full_unstemmed The Bender Gestalt Test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
title_sort bender gestalt test: an investigation into problems concerning administration and scoring and its application to low-educated adults
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002477
work_keys_str_mv AT dyallkate thebendergestalttestaninvestigationintoproblemsconcerningadministrationandscoringanditsapplicationtoloweducatedadults
AT dyallkate bendergestalttestaninvestigationintoproblemsconcerningadministrationandscoringanditsapplicationtoloweducatedadults
_version_ 1718693297282613248