Abstract

In response to the growing demand for a test of cognitive ability for South African adults, the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) adapted the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scales, third edition (WAIS-III) for Englishspeaking South Africans. The standardisation sample included both first and second language English speakers who were either educated largely in English or Afrikaans. The purpose of this article is to critically examine the adaptation process undertaken by the HSRC when standardising the WAIS-III for English-speaking South Africans by deliberating whether sufficient attention was paid to establishing if the measure was equivalent for various groups of English first and second language test-takers. In performing this critical examination, international test adaptation guidelines and standards, psychometric conventions, and national and international research findings were contemplated. The general conclusion reached was that the equivalence of the WAIS-III across diverse language groups has not been unequivocally established and there are indications that some bias may exist for English second language test-takers, especially if they are black or Afrikaans-speaking. Based on these conclusions, recommendations are made regarding the way forward.

Highlights

  • The Wechsler Scales Published in 1939, the Wechsler-Bellevue Adult Intelligence Scale was developed and standardised by David Wechsler as an alternative to the Stanford-Binet and with a clear purpose of measuring both verbal and non-verbal intellectual ability at the same time

  • The National Institute of Personnel Research (NIPR) completed the adaptation and standardisation of the outdated Wechsler-Bellevue Scales for South Africa in 1969 and the adapted test was published as being the South African Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (SAWAIS)

  • The unintentional misnaming of the measure by the NIPR led to a belief among practising psychologists that the South African adapted Wechsler-Bellevue was, the WAIS, and this resulted in a reduction in the pressure to rapidly undertake another revision

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Summary

OF THE OTHER LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL GROUPS

English-speaking whites compared with: Verbal Perceptual Working Processing Compre- Organi- Memory Speed hension sation. Did English-speaking coloureds consistently obtain significantly higher mean scores than Afrikaans-speaking coloureds (p-values ranged between .038 and

DISCUSSION
Findings
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