My Ds had a 2 year assessment yesterday. I don't have a report from it yet, but I am left wondering quite what the point of it was, and what other people's experiences of this assessment have been in the past. Now I know that the NHS must think there is some benefit, and that they otherwise wouldn't do it. I also know we are being included in a research study about how good follow up is of ex prems and whether the assessment is any better than any other test so clearly this is being looked at.
Now I am perfectly happy to accept that I am a stroppy so and so, and naturally sceptical about everything, and maybe I am being so about this too. I also do not believe in pyschometric tests or IQ tests as markers of anything other than how good you are at tests at all, and spend a lot of my working life looking at this stuff. However I would like to think I was open to persuasion.
However ds did the assessment standing up doign the puzzles etc against a table. And seeing as he can't independently stand I wonder whether this is akin to my typing this post with one hand tied behind my back. But he wouldn't sit but then again he is two so maybe that's all you need to say. However the people testing said that he was effectively making it hard for himself as he would have to concentrate of standing and not falling (which he didn't do - he has CP so we know all about the gross motor issues)
Then there was a test with a crayon and drawing. DS draws but we needed to tell the paeds to give him a pen as he doesn't like crayons as much as pens.
When he did he was fine but before then, would he do anything no.
Afterwards they told us that some 2 year olds refuse to do anything and cry all the time. Some do some tests and run off. Some decide they are bored, and some like DS tell the person testing to "go away" right in the middle of a discussion about hwether he can join two words together. Some cling to their parents and very few work through the puzzles. (and those that do tend to be girls!).
They also did various standard comprehension things. DS wasn't playing but to be fair the paeds starting saying to each other he looked straight at the book/cup etc when they asked him to before pretending to be shy.
Anyway I just wondered whether overall this assessment had anything to offer not just us, but more widely. I am all for early intervention but it seems so odd to test a two year old when they want to be a tow year old. (separately we also had a discussion about DS hearing which was useful, but they told us that they thought we would have no chance of testing that accurately at this stage purely becuase DS was a very wilful 2 year old). They also told us DS was clearly both sociable and willful. I told some friends this and the response was a bit well he was born at 29 weeks and he has you as a mum of course he's wilful!