This highly regarded test is widely used by clinical and school psychologists to evaluate the emotional, behavioral, cognitive, and interpersonal adjustment of children and teens. The PIC-2 is one of three coordinated instruments:
- PIC-2: provides the parents’ description of the child
- SBS (page 96): provides a teacher rating
- PIY (page 97): provides the child’s self-report
While each of these instruments has been validated to function independently, together they provide an integrated picture of the child’s adjustment at home, at school, and in the community.
Broad Content Coverage
Appropriate for evaluating 5- through 19-year-olds, the PIC-2 includes 275 true/false items on the following scales:
Response Validity Scales
- Inconsistency
- Dissimulation
- Defensiveness
Adjustment Scales and Subscales
- Inadequate Abilities
- Poor Achievement
- Developmental Delay
- Impulsivity and Distractibility
- Disruptive Behavior
- Fearlessness
- Antisocial Behavior
- Dyscontrol
- Noncompliance
- Conflict Among Members
- Parent Maladjustment
- Developmental Deviation
- Hallucinations and Delusions
- Psychosomatic Preoccupation
- Muscular Tension and Anxiety
- Fear and Worry
- Depression
- Sleep Disturbance/Preoccupation With Death
- Social Introversion
- Isolation
- Limited Peer Status
- Conflict With Peers
Flexible, Time-Saving Administration
The full scale can be completed by a parent or parent surrogate in about 40 minutes.
When you need a shorter administration, the PIC-2 offers a Behavioral Summary, which is comprised of the first 96 items on the test. Requiring just 15 minutes to administer, this version can be used for screening, research, or monitoring behavior change. It includes eight of the Adjustment Scales (all except Cognitive Impairment), each shortened to just 12 items. The Behavioral Summary Profile provides scores for the eight scales, plus a Total Score and three Composites: Externalization, Internalization, and Social Adjustment. Because the items on this short form are all in the present tense and all focused on conditions and behaviors that are responsive to relatively brief intervention, the Behavioral Summary is especially helpful in designing and evaluating individual treatment plans. It can be used on its own or scored as part of the full test.
By providing two administration formats, the PIC-2 gives you a great deal of flexibility. The standard, 275-item profile assesses the full range of developmental, cognitive, adjustment, and interpersonal issues, with subscales that supply useful clinical detail and an optional critical items list divided into nine content categories. The 96-item Behavioral Summary offers brevity, strong correlation with the full scale, a focus on current behavior that is likely to respond to treatment, and broad summary measures useful in evaluating change.
The PIC-2 was standardized on ratings from 2,306 parents of boys and girls in kindergarten through 12th grade. Protocols were collected from 23 urban, rural, and suburban schools in 12 states. Participating parents represented all socioeconomic levels and all major ethnic groups. In addition, data were collected from a sample of 1,551 parents whose children had been referred for educational or clinical intervention.