Ages: 12-0 through 17-11 Testing Time: 45 minutes Administration: Individual
The Social Language Development Test–Adolescent: Normative Update
(SLDT-A: NU) assesses language-based social skills. Specifically, it
measures students’ ability to make inferences, and interpret and respond
to social interaction. Performance on the test differentiates typically
developing students from those with autism spectrum disorder.
New Features
The norms have been updated to reflect the demographics of the 2016 U.S. Census.
The normative sample (N = 868) is stratified by age relative to geographic region, gender, race, and ethnicity.
New standard score metric for subtests and composites (M = 10, SD = 3; M = 100, SD = 15).
All-new item analysis and item bias studies provide convincing evidence of content-description validity.
All-new reliability and validity studies were prepared,
including diagnostic accuracy analyses, which are considered the most
rigorous techniques for establishing validity today. These analyses
involve the computation of sensitivity and specificity indexes and the
receiving operating characteristic/area under curve (ROC/AUC) statistic.
The audio files for the Interpreting Ironic Statements subtest are available for use or download online.
Description of the Test
The test has five subtests (Making Inferences, Interpreting Social
Language, Problem Solving, Social Interpretation, and Interpreting
Ironic Statements) that yield scaled scores. A composite score, called
the Social Language Development Index, represents overall performance on
the subtests. The Examiner’s Manual discusses the test’s theoretical
and research-based foundation, item development, standardization,
administration and scoring procedures, normative tables, and guidelines
for using and interpreting the test’s results. Reliability and validity
studies were conducted with students with typical language abilities and
students who had previously been diagnosed with autism spectrum
disorder.
The average coefficient alpha ranges between .76 and .86 for the
subtests and is .95 for the composite. New validity studies demonstrate
the test’s ability to differentiate students with autism spectrum
disorder from typically developing students. The results demonstrate
that a Social Language Development Index cutoff score of 90 resulted in a
sensitivity of .71, a specificity of .96, and a ROC/AUC of .90.