Details
                        Purpose
                        
                            Evaluates frequency and severity of child and adolescent aggression
                        
                        Authors
                        
                            Jeffrey M. Halperin, PhD, and Kathleen E. McKay, PhD
                        
                        Administration Formats
                        
                        Additional Details
                        
                            Results Facilitate Treatment Planning and Monitoring in Response to Acts of Aggression
The CAS is a multi-informant rating scale that evaluates the setting-specific frequency and severity of aggressive acts in children through parent and teacher rating forms.
                         
                            Expand all Additional Details
                            
                                Features and benefits
- The parent and the teacher versions of the Children’s Aggression Scale were developed to help evaluate the nature, severity, and frequency of aggressive behaviors in children, distinct from those behaviors better characterized as oppositional/defiant or hostile.
- Provides the comprehensive information that is necessary to develop an empirically based behavioral treatment plan for aggression as a symptom.
- Well suited for use in clinical, educational, forensic/criminal justice, and research settings.
- Items describe aggressive acts and are weighted differentially depending on the severity of the act.
- Standardized on a community sample of 438 parents and 516 teachers of children ages 5-18 years. Data were also collected on a clinical sample of 247 parents and 252 teachers of children who had been diagnosed with one or more of the following: ADHD, oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder, and social maladjustment.
- Validity was examined in terms of intercorrelations among the scales and clusters, convergent validity with existing behavioral measures (i.e., BASC-2, CBCL) and domain-specific assessments (i.e., OAS, CDS, IOWA Conners), and clinical validity among the clinical samples.
 
                            Collapse all Additional Details