Children's Nonverbal Learning Disabilities Scale Explained

Children's Nonverbal Learning Disabilities Scale (C-NLD)
Purpose:screens for the symptoms of nonverbal learning disabilities in children

The Children's Nonverbal Learning Disabilities Scale (C-NLD) is an assessment that screens for the symptoms for nonverbal learning disabilities in children, which can affect a child's visual spatial organization, motor abilities, and social interactions.[1] All questions in the assessment are categorized in three headings: motor skills, visual-spatial skills, and interpersonal skills.

The C-NLD is a 15 question measure intended to be filled out by the parent or guardian of the child. Each of the 15 questions are answered based on a four-option Likert scale, containing "Never/Rarely", "Sometimes", "Often/Always", and "I don't know" answer choices. The scale contains three sections; the first section is designed to assess motor skills consists of 4 questions, the second section is designed to assess visual-spatial skills consists of 7 questions, and the last section assesses interpersonal skills and consists of 4 questions.[2]

Psychometric properties

Reliability

Evaluating scores from the Children's Nonverbal Learning Diasbilites Scale against the EBA rubric for norms and reliability! Criterion !! Rating !! Explanation with references
Norms none available psycinfo search "reliability" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Internal consistency none available psycinfo search "reliability" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Inter-rater reliability none available psycinfo search "reliability" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Test-retest reliability (stability) none available psycinfo search "reliability" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Repeatability none available psycinfo search "reliability" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"

Validity

Evaluation of validity and utility for the Children's Nonverbal Learning Diasbilites Scale ! Criterion !! Rating !! Explanation with references
Content validity none available psycinfo search "validity" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Construct validity (e.g., predictive, concurrent, convergent, and discriminant validity) none available psycinfo search "validity" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Discriminative validity none available psycinfo search "validity" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Validity generalization none available psycinfo search "validity" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Treatment sensitivity none available psycinfo search "validity" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"
Clinical utility none available psycinfo search "validity" + "nonverbal learning disabilities scales"

Interpretation

C-NLD Scoring

Non-verbal learning disorder includes multiple specific symptoms characterized into three specific areas: neuropsychological deficits (deficits with perception, psychomotor coordination, memory, reasoning, and aspects of speech), academic deficits (mathematical reasoning, reading comprehension, and comprehension of written language) and social-emotional/adaptational deficits (social awareness and difficulties in social interactions).

The C-NLD works as a primary screening measure, and referral to a neuropsychologist for further testing is advised if the parent C-NLD report indicates "sometimes" or "often" for over half of the items in each of the three sub-sections.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Massachusetts General Hospital, School Psychiatry Program and MADI Resource Center (2010). Table of all screening tools and rating scales. Retrieved from Web site: Screening Tools & Rating Scales - the School Psychiatry Program and Mood & Anxiety Disorders Institute Resource Center Massachusetts General Hospital . 2015-09-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150927153032/http://www2.massgeneral.org/schoolpsychiatry/screeningtools_table.asp . 2015-09-27 .
  2. Rourke, B. P. (1994). Neuropsychological Assessment of Children with Learning Disabilities: Measurement Issues. In G. Reid Lyons (ed.), Frames of Reference for the Assessment of Learning Disabilities: New Views on Measurement Issues. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brooks.