The Token Test for Children-Second Edition (TTFC-2) is a reliable and effective screening measure for assessing receptive language in children ages 3 years 0 months to 12 years 11 months. Administration is rapid, yielding raw scores, standard scores, percentile ranks, and age equivalents. The normed representative sample consists of 1,310 children, residing in 22 states.
TTFC-2 comes with 20 small tokens, varying in size (large and small), shape (round and square), and color (blue, green, yellow, white, and red). The child is given three opportunities to practice. The administrator then gives the child 46 linguistic commands, to which they must respond by manipulating the tokens. The commands are arranged in four parts of increasing difficulty, and must be administered in consecutive order. Generally speaking the FFFC-2 measures listening comprehension of spoken english. ========= Taken from the Token Test for Children - Second Edition (TTFC-2) manual.
The Token Test for Children - Second Edition (TTFC-2) is a revision of the Token Test for Children. The first edition was created by Dr. Frank DiSimonni while the second edition was created by Dr. Ronnie McGhee and Dr. David Ehrler.
The Token Test for Children - Second Edition (TTFC-2) is a language screening test (listening comprehension) that's mostly used with children. The main purpose of this test is to see if a child can follow orally presented instructions. For example, the examiner will say, "Touch the red square" and then the behavior or lack of behavior in the child will be observed and noted. The test is interpreted using a variety of scores such as standard scores, percentile ranks, and age equivalents. The TTFC-2 is a sensitive measure of language processing and is helpful in diagnosing the presence of language processing disorders.
The Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (TONI) has an age range of 6 y.o. thru 89 y.o. The Primary test (PTONI) is for children 3 thru 9 y.o. Each provides an assessment of General Nonverbal Intelligence which can be reported various ways: Standard Score, Percentile, Age Equivalent. There are many 'nonverbal tests of intelligence. Another one in the TONI line is the Comprehensive Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (CTONI), which looks at analogic, sequential and classification reasoning skills. It provides several scores based on those skills and combinations thereof. +++++++ Both tests measure aspects of perceptual, abstract and conceptual reasoning. The PTONI has 8 alternative language administration instructions in the manual, including Japanese, Chinese (Mandarin), Vietnamese, Korean, and French - among others. The TONI is in it's third edition and may soon be revised to it's fourth edition.
The nonverbal format of the Primary Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (PTONI) is especially appropriate for testing children who typically are not verbally or motorically well developed. Furthermore, directions in eight alternative languages are provide for the PTONI making it an appropriate assessment of intelligence for children from diverse language backgrounds. The PTONI is appropriate for children with hearing impairments so long as they can understand the directions given in sign language. ===== Taken from the Primary Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (PTONI) manual.
Alfred Binet was a French psychologist who is most famous for coming up with the first, real intelligence test (he also coined the term "sexual fetish"). He developed the intelligence test shortly after the time when France passed a law for mandatory school attendance for children. The IQ test was primarily designed to distinguish between the abilities of normal, abnormal, and retarded children; by distinguishing between the groups, the ones that needed extra assistance could be given it. The Binet IQ test was further reformed by Lewis Terman, an American professor at Stanford. The IQ test is now referred to as the Stanford-Binet test.
Yes there are separate IQ tests for different age groups. Very young children will be given a different I.Q. test than a child of school age, the younger the child the less reliable the I.Q. test. Once entering adulthood (16+) another test will be used. The scores one gets on a test are not directly comparable to people of a different age, for example: If a 16 year old got an I.Q. test score of 110, and a 25 year old also scored 110, this does not mean they scored equally on the test. If the 25 year old were to have answered all questions exactly as the 16 year old did, they would have gotten a much lower score than the 16 year old. This is because, even in the same test, people are compared to others of the same age group, not all takers of the test. The mostly commonly used tests for school aged children is the WISC (Wechsler Intelligence scale for children) and for adults it is the WAIS (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale).
The Token Test for Children - Second Edition (TTFC-2) is a revision of the Token Test for Children. The first edition was created by Dr. Frank DiSimonni while the second edition was created by Dr. Ronnie McGhee and Dr. David Ehrler.
The Token Test for Children - Second Edition (TTFC-2) is a language screening test (listening comprehension) that's mostly used with children. The main purpose of this test is to see if a child can follow orally presented instructions. For example, the examiner will say, "Touch the red square" and then the behavior or lack of behavior in the child will be observed and noted. The test is interpreted using a variety of scores such as standard scores, percentile ranks, and age equivalents. The TTFC-2 is a sensitive measure of language processing and is helpful in diagnosing the presence of language processing disorders.
29 is the cut-off
Inside Edition - 1988 Termite Test was released on: USA: 21 November 2013
Sports Crash - 2010 Special Edition Crash Test was released on: USA: 10 April 2011
you cant
Your instructor has them.
put the word submarine on it
You pass the second grade test the second graders take in China by learning all the material on the fourth grade test in The United States.
Yes, they will retest the first and test the second.
1965 Canadian quarters have a caribou on the reverse, so your question is somewhat unanswerable.
It is an aptitude test for children. The most recent edition, the 4th, is made for ages 6-17. It is made up of 10 subtests that combine to give the person a composite score based on IQ scores with 100 being the mean and 15 being the standard deviation.