On
December 29th Mary had her neuropsychological evaluation. Her social
worker picked her up in Grand Rapids and drove her to Sauk Rapids to get
evaluated by Dr. Tim Tinius. I had been reading about
neuropsychological evaluations and had talked to a number of
psychologists from the Mankato area about how these were conducted. Most
of them told me these tests can take anywhere from three to four hours,
are comprised of a number of individual tests, and are often spread out
over a few days. Usually the parents meet separately with the
psychologist to provide a history of their child in order to rule out
things like birth defects and the like. None of the psychologists I
talked with said they could perform a neuropsych examination in one hour,
and certainly none of them mentioned anything about parental
assessments being any part of a child's neuropsychological evaluation.
Yet, Mary's exam lasted about an hour, the parents were never consulted
(at least not me), and most of the test results were devoted to a
parental assessment.