Friday, November 22, 2024

Research Byte: Beyond Individual #Tests: Youths’ #Cognitive Abilities, Basic #Reading, and #Writing—relevant to #schoolpsychologists #CHC

An impressive multiple test-battery CHC theory cognitive and achievement (cross-battery) confirmatory factor analysis study based on a research design first conceptualized by Jack McArdle (planned missing data reference variable design) that finds that multiple broad CHC abilities are important in explaining reading and writing achievement above and beyond psychometric g.  Of course, the results would be different if a bi-factor model were run (see McGrew et al., 2023 for discussion of three major classes of cognitive-achievement CFA/SEM research designs).  

Click here to download/read this open access articles. 

This research group, IMHO, does some of the best CFA/SEM modeling in the assessment and school psychology literature.

Click on images to enlarge for easier viewing.



Beyond Individual Tests: Youths’ Cognitive Abilities, Basic Reading, and Writing 

by  1,* 1 2 and  3
1
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06268, USA
2
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA
3
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. 
J. Intell. 202412(11), 120; https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence12110120
Abstract

Broadly, individuals’ cognitive abilities influence their academic skills, but the significance and strength of specific cognitive abilities varies across academic domains and may vary across age. Simultaneous analyses of data from many tests and cross-battery analyses can address inconsistent findings from prior studies by creating comprehensively defined constructs, which allow for greater generalizability of findings. The purpose of this study was to examine the cross-battery direct effects and developmental differences in youths’ cognitive abilities on their basic reading abilities, as well as the relations between their reading and writing achievement. Our sample included 3927 youth aged 6 to 18. Six intelligence tests (66 subtests) and three achievement tests (10 subtests) were analyzed. Youths’ general intelligence (g, large direct and indirect effects), verbal comprehension–knowledge (large direct effect), working memory (large direct effect), and learning efficiency (moderate direct effect) explained their basic reading skills. The influence of g and fluid reasoning were difficult to separate statistically. Most of the cognitive–basic reading relations were stable across age, except the influence of verbal comprehension–knowledge (Gc), which appeared to slightly increase with age. Youths’ basic reading had large influences on their written expression and spelling skills, and their spelling skills had a large influence on their written expression skills. The directionality of the effects most strongly supported the direct effects from the youths’ basic reading to their spelling skills, and not vice versa.