Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for responding.
Do you have a feel for what is considered "high"? Above 80th percentile? 90th?
Also, how comprehensive is the test? Does it cover math/verbal/spatial? We only saw a final score, not a breakdown of topics.
For a child with advanced verbal skills, are their needs typically met by the reading specialists that already come into the classroom?
I believe my child's needs are generally being met in his classroom, but just want to be sure we don't miss something.
Try googling NNAT and looking at sample questions. There is not a verbal component at all to the NNAT. There is only one score. Basically it is pictures and they have to figure out the answer (sorry, my memory is not fresh on this). But it is not like there is a math section and a verbal section and a spatial section. That is more like the CoGAT.
Anonymous wrote:In Arlington CogAt is given in 4th grade, not 2nd.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for responding.
Do you have a feel for what is considered "high"? Above 80th percentile? 90th?
Also, how comprehensive is the test? Does it cover math/verbal/spatial? We only saw a final score, not a breakdown of topics.
For a child with advanced verbal skills, are their needs typically met by the reading specialists that already come into the classroom?
I believe my child's needs are generally being met in his classroom, but just want to be sure we don't miss something.
Anonymous wrote:If the percentage is 99% your child has a good chance but he/she has to do well on another test in 2nd grade, the cogAT test.
It's still too soon to tell in 1st grade.
Anonymous wrote:If the percentage is 99% your child has a good chance but he/she has to do well on another test in 2nd grade, the cogAT test.
It's still too soon to tell in 1st grade.