Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation

Although research supports the use of measures of typical performance for assessing academic and cognitive skills, there are currently few such measures in existence. Other measures have been used for research purposes, but they are not normed on a large, nationally-representative sample. The Rating...

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Main Author: Lamb, Gordon Dale
Other Authors: Reynolds, Cecil R
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/86064
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-860642013-01-08T10:39:07ZRatings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validationLamb, Gordon Daleschool readinesstypical performanceAlthough research supports the use of measures of typical performance for assessing academic and cognitive skills, there are currently few such measures in existence. Other measures have been used for research purposes, but they are not normed on a large, nationally-representative sample. The Ratings of Everyday Academic and Cognitive Skills (REACS) was created to address the need for a measure of typical academic and cognitive skills. The goal of the REACS is to provide a timely, easy to administer, and comprehensive assessment of a child's typical functioning in various academic and cognitive domains. The purpose for this dissertation was to develop the initial scale and conduct analyses to provide evidence of its reliability and validity. In an attempt to provide preliminary evidence of the validity of scores from this measure, Parent (n = 142) and Teacher (n = 109) REACS forms were collected for data analysis. A subsample of parents and teachers completed forms to examine interrater and test-retest reliability. A group of children (n = 32) were assessed with measures of academic achievement, cognitive ability, and memory for comparison to the REACS. Results generally showed high internal consistency, yet less reliable test-retest and interrater reliability. While the confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) of the parent scale supported a factor structure that approximated the intended structure of the REACS, a better fit was found with a simpler model for the teacher scale. Finally, both the Parent and Teacher REACS forms were found to predict academic achievement better than cognitive ability. The predictive ability of the REACS was enhanced when used in conjunction with a measure of cognitive ability.Texas A&M UniversityReynolds, Cecil R2008-10-10T21:02:27Z2008-10-10T21:02:27Z2008-082008-10-10T21:02:27ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextelectronicborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/86064en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic school readiness
typical performance
spellingShingle school readiness
typical performance
Lamb, Gordon Dale
Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
description Although research supports the use of measures of typical performance for assessing academic and cognitive skills, there are currently few such measures in existence. Other measures have been used for research purposes, but they are not normed on a large, nationally-representative sample. The Ratings of Everyday Academic and Cognitive Skills (REACS) was created to address the need for a measure of typical academic and cognitive skills. The goal of the REACS is to provide a timely, easy to administer, and comprehensive assessment of a child's typical functioning in various academic and cognitive domains. The purpose for this dissertation was to develop the initial scale and conduct analyses to provide evidence of its reliability and validity. In an attempt to provide preliminary evidence of the validity of scores from this measure, Parent (n = 142) and Teacher (n = 109) REACS forms were collected for data analysis. A subsample of parents and teachers completed forms to examine interrater and test-retest reliability. A group of children (n = 32) were assessed with measures of academic achievement, cognitive ability, and memory for comparison to the REACS. Results generally showed high internal consistency, yet less reliable test-retest and interrater reliability. While the confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) of the parent scale supported a factor structure that approximated the intended structure of the REACS, a better fit was found with a simpler model for the teacher scale. Finally, both the Parent and Teacher REACS forms were found to predict academic achievement better than cognitive ability. The predictive ability of the REACS was enhanced when used in conjunction with a measure of cognitive ability.
author2 Reynolds, Cecil R
author_facet Reynolds, Cecil R
Lamb, Gordon Dale
author Lamb, Gordon Dale
author_sort Lamb, Gordon Dale
title Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
title_short Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
title_full Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
title_fullStr Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
title_full_unstemmed Ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
title_sort ratings of everyday academic and cognitive skills in evaluation of school learning and learning problems: initial scale development and validation
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/86064
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