Developmental Test of Visual Perception | Third Edition

DTVP-3
  • Donald D. Hammill, PhD
  • Nils A. Pearson
  • Judith K. Voress, PhD

Developmental Test of Visual Perception Third Edition provides assessment of visual perception and visual-motor integration.

Choose from our formats

  • Kits

    Starter & complete kits, print & digital

    1 option

    From USD 351.90
  • Test forms reports

    Booklets, record forms, answer sheets, report usages & subscriptions

    2 options

    From USD 54.05
  • All products

    All tests and materials offered for DTVP-3

    3 options

    From USD 54.05
- of 3 results
  • DTVP-3 Kit (Print)
    0158175956 Qualification Level B

    USD 351.90

    Estimated to ship:1-2 weeks
  • DTVP-3 Response Booklets Qty 25 (Print)
    0158175964 Qualification Level B

    USD 112.70

    Estimated to ship:1-2 weeks
  • DTVP-3 Record Forms Qty 25 (Print)
    0158175972 Qualification Level B

    USD 54.05

    Estimated to ship:1-2 weeks

Overview

Publication date:
2013
Age range:
4-0 through 12-11
Qualification level:
B

Product Details

The results of the five DTVP-3 subtests combine to form three composites: Motor-reduced Visual Perception, Visual-Motor Integration, and General Visual Perception (combination of motor-reduced and motor-enhanced subtests). Subtests are assigned to a particular composite on the basis of the amount of motor ability required by their formats.

Benefits

  • Gives a highly reliable measure, offering extended norms to age 12:11.
  • Uses new normative data collected in 2010 and 2011.
  • Composite scores have no floor or ceiling effects.
  • Provides numerous eligibility and validity studies, including studies of the test's sensitivity, specificity, and ROC/AUC.
  • Provides expanded study of item bias.
  • Overall look of the test is updated.

Features

The DTVP-3 comprises five subtests:

  • Eye-Hand Coordination: Children are required to draw precise straight or curved lines in accordance with visual boundaries.
  • Copying: Children are shown a simple figure and asked to draw it on a piece of paper. The figure serves as a model for the drawing. Subsequent figures are increasingly complex.
  • Figure-Ground: Children are shown stimulus figures and asked to find as many of the figures as they can on a page where the figures are hidden in a complex, confusing background.
  • Visual Closure: Children are shown a stimulus figure and asked to select the exact figure from a series of figures that have been incompletely drawn. In order to complete the match, children have to mentally supply the missing parts of the figures in the series.
  • Form Constancy: Children are shown a stimulus figure and asked to find it in a series of figures. The targeted figure will have a different size, position, and/or shade, and it may be hidden in a distracting background.