Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a school psychologist I have to let you know that you will invalidate the test if you expose your child to the questions before it’s administered.
What’s wrong with you people?
How can they be exposed to questions?? THere is nothing out there with WISC questions!
Anonymous wrote:As a school psychologist I have to let you know that you will invalidate the test if you expose your child to the questions before it’s administered.
What’s wrong with you people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So actually, COGAT type books help. I would work more on patterns and the balance puzzle things. THey should at least know the structure of the test. My kid took at age 7. I at least had him mentally prepare by doing some puzzle type of stuff. Also, FYI, the WISC is NO LONGER weighed for AAP consideration.They don’t consider outside testing. My child scored in the 99th percentile and still got into AAP 2 years later.
Two years ago, they did consider the WISC for AAP, but because you prepped your DC, the test results were invalid and that was indicated.
Oops.
Anonymous wrote:
So actually, COGAT type books help. I would work more on patterns and the balance puzzle things. THey should at least know the structure of the test. My kid took at age 7. I at least had him mentally prepare by doing some puzzle type of stuff. Also, FYI, the WISC is NO LONGER weighed for AAP consideration.They don’t consider outside testing. My child scored in the 99th percentile and still got into AAP 2 years later.
Anonymous wrote:Of course kids prepare, just like someone would for the ACT, SAT, LSAT, etc. There are books that will show you what different types of questions are on the test. It is not the actual test question. Just because you have seen what types of questions they ask doesn’t mean you will answer the real test questions correctly. There are also some good logic games out there that help with spatial reasoning. Try Q-bitz.
Anonymous wrote:Of course kids prepare, just like someone would for the ACT, SAT, LSAT, etc. There are books that will show you what different types of questions are on the test. It is not the actual test question. Just because you have seen what types of questions they ask doesn’t mean you will answer the real test questions correctly. There are also some good logic games out there that help with spatial reasoning. Try Q-bitz.
+1Anonymous wrote:Of course kids prepare, just like someone would for the ACT, SAT, LSAT, etc. There are books that will show you what different types of questions are on the test. It is not the actual test question. Just because you have seen what types of questions they ask doesn’t mean you will answer the real test questions correctly. There are also some good logic games out there that help with spatial reasoning. Try Q-bitz.