Guest guest Posted June 26, 2007 Report Share Posted June 26, 2007 Will agree to differ. I will side with BCBA who thought P Scales vague and meaningless in comparision to ABLLS. Interesting that P Scales will be officially used for measuring from september. Wonder how the scales will be tested when the scales are worded which are open to many interpretations? > > > Date: 2007/06/26 Tue AM 08:26:04 BST > To: Autism-Biomedical-Europe > Subject: Re: Re: Education/health testing? > > Our local PMLD school uses P levels. People whose children use it praise > it and the staff work hard, assessed and monitored a lot, work on > target-setting, have a very involved and thorough head. I would think > they can be used well (or badly) depending on other things really. I > certainly agree they are not a sufficient indicator in themselves. Staff > need to assess properly and use them. They can also give rise to > pointless activity. > > At this PMLD school I was shown round and a group of children were doing > a play (about the Christmas Truce in WW1). The person showing me round > commented that probably only one partic boy had any idea what was going > on. That would have been fulfilling some sort of P level curriculum > target. The person showing me round (a personal friend) was > half-suggesting that I send Edith but I'm afraid I just thought what a > waste of time for the children who don't understand what they are doing. > > I think I've just made two contradictory points. > xx Sally > > Mum231ASD@... wrote: > > > > In a message dated 26/06/2007 06:00:54 GMT Standard Time, > > mummysboytesco (DOT) net writes: > > > > P levels are pivat levels - Schools use them as a measure of > > 'progress'. Each level is so broadly worded, not specific (and > > therefore not a true measure of progress/learning) that in reality > > P levels are not worth the paper they are written on. Parents > > should be specific initially not to accept P Levels as a measuring > > tool but unfortunately if schools are not obliged to 'prove' the > > levels then they continue using them. Steer clear of any school > > using P Levels as a measuring tool. > > > > >>By September of this year they will be required to use P levels as > > an assessment tool. They are better than what we had before which was > > nothing. Unfortunately we do not live in an ideal ABLLS world > > > > Mandi x > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > > > No virus found in this incoming message. > > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > > Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.9.6/865 - Release Date: 24/06/2007 08:33 > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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