Cognitive Assessment System (CAS): Psychometric studies with Portuguese children.
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The Cognitive Assessment System (CAS) is a new measure of cognitive
abilities based on the Planning, Attention, Simultaneous and Successive (PASS)
Theory. This theory is derived from research in neuropsychological and cognitive
Psychology with particular emphasis on the work of Luria (1973). According to
Naglieri (1999) and Naglieri and Das (1997), the PASS cognitive processes are
the basic building blocks of human intellectual functioning. Planning processes
provide cognitive control, utilization of processes and knowledge, intentionality,
and self-regulation to achieve a desired goal; Attention processes provide focused,
selective cognitive activity and resistance to distraction; and, Simultaneous and
Successive processes are the two forms of operating on information. The PASS
theory has had a strong empirical base prior to the publication of the CAS (see Das,
Naglieri & Kirby, 1994), and its research foundation remains strong (see Naglieri,
1999; Naglieri & Das, 1997). The four basic psychological processes can be used
to (1) gain an understanding of how well a child thinks; (2) discover the child’s
strengths and needs, which can then be used for effective differential diagnosis;
(3) conduct fair assessment; and (4) select or design appropriate interventions.
Compared to the traditional intelligence tests, including IQ tests, the Cognitive
Assessment System (CAS) has the great advantage of relying on a modern theory
of cognitive functioning, linking theory with practice.
Description
Citation
Rosário, A., Candeias, A. & Roazzi, A. (2013). Cognitive Assessment System (CAS): Psychometric studies with Portuguese children. In A. Roazzi, B. C. de Souza, & W. Bilsky (Eds.), Searching for structure in complex social, cultural and psychological phenomena, (pp. 243-261). Recife, PE: FTA.