1991
DOI: 10.1016/0022-4405(91)90015-j
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Relationship between the peabody picture vocabulary test-revised, wide range achievement test-tevised, and weschler intelligence scale for children-revised

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Cited by 30 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…The PPVT is an oral assessment of receptive language that is highly correlated with language ability and verbal IQ (Smith et al, 1991). Children were shown a set of four pictures and asked to indicate which picture best described the word that the experimenter had just told them.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The PPVT is an oral assessment of receptive language that is highly correlated with language ability and verbal IQ (Smith et al, 1991). Children were shown a set of four pictures and asked to indicate which picture best described the word that the experimenter had just told them.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The PPVT‐4 was selected to measure initial levels of receptive vocabulary in light of previous research indicating that initial receptive vocabulary levels are correlated with response to vocabulary instruction (Coyne et al, 2007; Loftus, 2008; Penno et al, 2002). Furthermore, research evidence links scores on all editions of the PPVT to later reading achievement (Carvajal, Hayes, Miller, Wiebe, & Weaver, 1993; Ollendick, Finch, & Ginn, 1974; Smith, Smith, & Dobbs, 1991; Williams & Wang, 1997). Therefore, scores on the PPVT may be interpreted as suggesting a “risk status indicator” for students who demonstrate low vocabulary.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large body of evidence shows that vocabulary size is a significant predictor of academic achievement and literacy acquisition (Adams, 1990; Kastner, May & Hildman, 2001; Ouellette, 2006; Ricketts, Nation & Bishop, 2007; Rohde & Thompson, 2007; Swanson, Rosston, Gerber & Solari, 2008). In a study of almost 200 ten-year-olds, Smith, Smith and Dobbs (1991) reported significant correlations between PPVT scores and the reading, spelling, and arithmetic subtests of the Wide Range Achievement test (WRAT-R; Jastek & Wilkinson, 1984). Therefore, if bilingual children have a smaller vocabulary than monolingual children in the language of schooling, there may be consequences for the success of those children in school-related assessments.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%