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General Parenting
So the neuropsychologist report said...NORMAL????
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<blockquote data-quote="DaisyFace" data-source="post: 439540" data-attributes="member: 6546"><p>Whoa--</p><p></p><p>That's unexpected.</p><p></p><p>Were you allowed to see all the results? Sometimes average/above average does not tell the whole story.</p><p></p><p>It has been explained to me that it is not the SCORES themselves that are most revealing on these tests - but rather, the variances between the scores that indicate a "disability". For example, I know a person who earned a perfect score in the reading/verbal portion of the tests and then scored average in the math/numeric postion of the tests. You could say, well, both scores were in the average/above average range. BUT the large discrepancy between the verbal and the numeric actually indicates a disability in Math - despite the 'average' score.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DaisyFace, post: 439540, member: 6546"] Whoa-- That's unexpected. Were you allowed to see all the results? Sometimes average/above average does not tell the whole story. It has been explained to me that it is not the SCORES themselves that are most revealing on these tests - but rather, the variances between the scores that indicate a "disability". For example, I know a person who earned a perfect score in the reading/verbal portion of the tests and then scored average in the math/numeric postion of the tests. You could say, well, both scores were in the average/above average range. BUT the large discrepancy between the verbal and the numeric actually indicates a disability in Math - despite the 'average' score. [/QUOTE]
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So the neuropsychologist report said...NORMAL????
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