RAIT-NV

Reynolds Adaptable Intelligence Test Nonverbal

Details

Purpose

Assesses nonverbal, fluid intelligence

Authors

Cecil R. Reynolds, PhD

Administration Formats

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Additional Details

Administer Two Subtests to Assess Nonverbal Intelligence with Clients who have Limited Motor Coordination or Visual-Motor Skills

Derived from the RAIT, the RAIT-NV is a rapid, reliable, and valid test of nonverbal intelligence. It was created using the two nonverbal subtests from the RAIT to give an accurate assessment of fluid intelligence. Although the RAIT-NV has a maximum time limit, it remains a power test and not a speeded test. Use when you need to assess intellectual level but the examinee has limited English skills or cannot communicate verbally.

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Features and benefits

  • Created for use with individuals who do not speak English, those with hearing impairments, individuals unwilling to communicate verbally, or populations with minimal language capabilities.
  • No reading skill, motor coordination, or visual–motor capabilities are required, reducing the confounds that occur when manipulated objects are used to assess nonverbal intelligence.
  • Can be administered individually or in a group format. May be used in human resource and related industrial settings, schools, juvenile and adult justice systems, and clinical practices.
  • Designed to provide continuity across a wide age span.
  • Examined rigorously to be free of gender and ethnic bias, reducing gender and ethnicity as confounds, particularly important for use with English as a second language (ESL) students and adults.
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Photo of Reynolds Adaptable Intelligence Test Nonverbal
Age Range 10 years to 75 years
Admin Time 20 minutes
Qualification Level B

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FAQs

What is the technical information for the RAIT-NV?

Test structure

  • Two subtests evaluate fluid intelligence. The Nonverbal Analogies subtest and Sequences subtest use appealing, bright illustrations that are engaging to examinees.
  • The two subtests sum to create the RAIT Nonverbal Intelligence Index (NVII), which is scaled to the familiar IQ metric.
  • The Score Summary Form allows you to track examinees' scores over multiple administrations, to calculate reliable change indexes, and to calculate discrepancy scores.
  • Each subtest has a sample item to facilitate comprehension that may be read by the examinee, read aloud to the examinee, or conveyed using hand gestures, and alternate instructions and additional sample items are provided for special populations.

 Administration

  • Appropriate for use with individuals ages 10 to 75 years who can understand the written or demonstrated directions for subtests and are able to formulate the necessary responses.
  • Individuals with significant vision problems may perform poorly on the RAIT-NV.
  • Can be administered to individuals with significant fine-motor impairments.
  • The RAIT-NV has two subtests which are timed separately.
  • Two subtests take 17 minutes total.
  • The proctor must use a stopwatch to monitor the time limits for each subtest, except when using certain alternate administration instructions.
  • The RAIT-NV is only available on paper.

Scoring and Reporting

  • The first page of the RAIT-NV score summary form contains spaces for recording the examinee’s demographic and background information.
  • To calculate the raw score for each RAIT-NV subtest, place the RAIT-NV scoring key on top of the RAIT-NV answer sheet. The transparent scoring key overlays a black box around the correct responses.
  • For reliable change scores, enter the date of testing, age of testing, and T score for Time 1 and Time 2. Then calculate the difference between the two scores.

Reliability, validity, and norms

  • Standardized on a sample of 2,124 individuals matched to 2010 U.S. Census statistics.
  • Multiple types of scores are provided, including z scores, normal curve equivalents, stanines, percentiles, and age equivalents.
  • Validity was investigated using individuals from several clinical groups, including intellectual disability, TBI, stroke, dementia, learning disability, hearing impairment, and ADHD.
  • An investigation of RAIT-NV scores' relationship to examinees' occupational industries and job complexity levels revealed expected patterns.