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Draw A Person Test

The Draw-A-Person test is a projective personality test used to evaluate intelligence and screen for emotional or behavioral disorders in children and adolescents. It was originally called the Goodenough Draw-A-Man test in 1926 and was later revised in 1963 as the Goodenough-Harris Drawing Test. The test involves having a child draw three pictures of individuals and is scored both quantitatively and by examining elements that may indicate emotional problems, to infer the child's cognitive development and identify any issues.

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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
4K views8 pages

Draw A Person Test

The Draw-A-Person test is a projective personality test used to evaluate intelligence and screen for emotional or behavioral disorders in children and adolescents. It was originally called the Goodenough Draw-A-Man test in 1926 and was later revised in 1963 as the Goodenough-Harris Drawing Test. The test involves having a child draw three pictures of individuals and is scored both quantitatively and by examining elements that may indicate emotional problems, to infer the child's cognitive development and identify any issues.

Uploaded by

Sharon Quinto
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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is a psychological projective

personality or cognitive test used to evaluate and adolescents for variety of purposes:
 Measures nonverbal intelligence  Screens for emotional or behavioral

disorders

First known as Goodenough Draw-A-Man in 1926 by Florence Goodenough in her book Measurement of Intelligence by Drawings In 1963 Dr. Dale B. Harris revised and extended the test into Goodenough-Harris Drawing Test in his book, Children's Drawings as Measures of Intellectual Maturity

Draw 3 individual (Man, Woman and themselves) drawings on separate pieces of paper 2. A child must draw a whole person 3. Free Drawing, there is no right or wrong 4. The test has no time limit Advantage: Non-threatening to children
1.

Evaluate Intelligence uses


Draw-a-Person: QSS (Quantitative Scoring System)
 This system analyzes 14 different aspects of the

drawings (such as specific body parts and clothing) for various criteria, including presence or absence, detail, and proportion.  In all, there are 64 scoring items for each drawing.  A separate standard score is recorded for each drawing, and a total score for all three.

Assess Emotional Problems Draw-a-Person: SPED (Screening Procedure for Emotional Disturbance)
 This system is composed of two types of

criteria.
first type, eight dimensions of each drawing are evaluated against norms for the child's age group. second type, 47 different items are considered for each drawing.

Assist professionals in inferring children's cognitive developmental levels with little or no influence of other factors such as language barriers or special needs

Thank You for Listening By ALPHA SHARON G. QUINTO

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