Arrange a face-to-face meeting with the child's parents. Allow time for the parents to ask questions or express concerns.
Tell the parents why their child's IQ will be assessed. The most common reasons are to determine whether a child is gifted and to determine whether a child is developmentally delayed.
Inform the parents which test their child will take. Generally, children between the ages of 6 and 16 receive a Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC). Children under the age of 6 typically receive the Weschler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI).
Provide a brief explanation of the test scoring. Tell parents that their child's score will be compared to the scores of other children the same age. According to Jonathan Rich, Ph.D., a California psychologist who maintains a Psychological Testing website, the average IQ is 100. A child with an IQ of 130 or above is considered gifted. A child with an IQ lower than 55 is considered mildly mentally retarded.
Encourage parents not to worry or put any emotional pressure on their child before the test. An IQ test is not the type of test you can study for, and it is not the type of test that is "passed" or "failed."
Arrange a private meeting with the child's parents. Allow time for them to ask questions and express concerns.
Remind parents which test their child took, the scoring of the text, and what different scores imply.
Tell the parents how their child scored on the test. Again, assure the parents that an IQ test provides only a "rough measure of academic intelligence," according to the Edublox Reading and Learning Clinic Magazine. The score does not change who the child is and should not be used to define all of his abilities.
Explain any implications of the test score. For instance, a child who is developmentally disabled may be eligible for extra services at school and in the community. A gifted child might do better in a program where she would study with others with high IQ scores.