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A full evaluation is a comprehensive psychological and psychoeducational assessment that goes beyond a single IQ test. It provides a detailed picture of your cognitive, academic, emotional, and behavioral functioning, with actionable recommendations for academic planning, career development, or clinical intervention.
Testing that may provide qualifying evidence for Mensa admission and preparation for the high-IQ society. American Mensa's published prior-evidence list includes WAIS-IV and Stanford-Binet 5; verify current acceptance of WAIS-5 before testing.
Book your comprehensive assessment with detailed report and recommendations for academic planning. Includes WISC-V, WAIS-IV, WAIS-5, or Stanford-Binet 5 as appropriate, with a licensed psychologist in Denver today.
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What is a Full Evaluation?
A full evaluation is a comprehensive psychological and psychoeducational assessment that provides a complete picture of your cognitive, academic, emotional, and behavioral functioning. Unlike a single IQ test, which focuses only on cognitive abilities, a full evaluation includes multiple tests and assessments to provide a holistic understanding of your strengths and challenges.
Full evaluations are typically conducted by licensed psychologists and can take anywhere from 2 to 6 hours of testing time, often spread across multiple sessions.
What a Full Evaluation Includes
Cognitive Assessment (IQ testing): WISC-V (children), WAIS-IV or WAIS-5 (adults), or Stanford-Binet 5 to measure intellectual abilities
Academic Achievement Testing: Measures reading, writing, math, and other academic skills
Behavioral and Emotional Assessment: Questionnaires and interviews to assess emotional well-being, social functioning, and behavioral patterns
Executive Functioning Assessment: Measures attention, planning, organization, and self-regulation
Clinical Interview: Detailed interview to understand personal history, concerns, and goals
Comprehensive Report: Detailed findings with scores, interpretations, and actionable recommendations
Full Evaluation vs. Single IQ Test
Feature
Full Evaluation
Single IQ Test
What's Measured
Cognitive, academic, emotional, behavioral
Cognitive abilities only
Testing Time
2-6 hours (often multiple sessions)
45-90 minutes
Tests Included
IQ test + achievement tests + emotional/behavioral assessments
Single IQ test (e.g., WISC-V, WAIS-IV, WAIS-5, SB-5)
Report
Comprehensive, multi-page report with detailed recommendations
Shorter report with IQ scores and basic interpretation
A full evaluation is recommended in several situations:
Learning disabilities: Suspected dyslexia, dyscalculia, dysgraphia, or other learning disorders
ADHD: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder diagnosis and treatment planning
Giftedness with learning challenges (2E): Twice-exceptional children who are both gifted and have learning disabilities
Autism assessment: Comprehensive evaluation for autism spectrum disorder
Educational planning: For Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) or 504 plans
Legal documentation: For court cases, disability claims, or special education advocacy
Mental health concerns: Anxiety, depression, or other emotional challenges affecting academic or occupational functioning
College accommodations: Documentation for accommodations on college entrance exams (SAT, ACT, GRE) or in college settings
Denver Hospitals and Clinical Resources Offering Evaluations
UCHealth Neuropsychology
Provides neuropsychological evaluation for appropriate adult referral questions, including neurological and memory concerns.
Services generally require clinical triage or referral; availability and insurance participation should be confirmed.
Children’s Hospital Colorado Neuropsychology
Provides cognitive assessment for children, adolescents, and young adults with neurological and chronic medical conditions.
A medical neuropsychological evaluation may differ from a school-placement or gifted-only assessment.
JFK Partners and University of Colorado Developmental Services
Denver-area university and hospital programs support developmental, autism, disability, clinical, training, and research services.
Families should confirm whether a specific clinic provides diagnostic evaluation, treatment, research participation, or referral guidance.
VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System
Offers psychology and neuropsychology services for eligible Veterans within its healthcare system.
Access depends on VA eligibility, clinical need, referral, and current service availability.
TriStar, Ascension Saint Thomas, and Other Health Systems
Hospital systems may provide behavioral-health, neurological, rehabilitation, or referral services.
Confirm whether the specific facility offers the type of psychological or neuropsychological evaluation needed.
Private-Practice Psychologists and Neuropsychologists
Private clinicians may offer ADHD, learning-disability, autism, gifted, adult cognitive, disability-documentation, and forensic evaluations.
Verify licensure, age range, specialty, insurance status, test battery, report turnaround, and intended use.
Denver Evaluation Costs by Provider Type
Evaluation fees vary widely. A focused IQ assessment generally costs less than a full psychoeducational, autism, ADHD, forensic, or neuropsychological battery. Hospital-based services may bill insurance when medically necessary, while school-placement, gifted, and career-focused testing is often self-pay.
Focused cognitive assessment: Ask whether consultation, testing, scoring, feedback, and a report are included.
Full psychoeducational evaluation: Usually includes cognitive and academic testing plus history, rating scales, and recommendations.
Neuropsychological evaluation: Often includes a broader battery selected for a medical or neurological question.
Forensic or expedited work: May involve additional fees and different consent or report procedures.
Denver Legal and Forensic Evaluations
Court-related matters: Denver County courts may require qualified forensic evaluators for competency, guardianship, custody, disability, or other legal questions.
Disability claims: Documentation standards differ for Social Security, private disability insurance, employment, and academic accommodations.
Workers' compensation: Colorado workers' compensation cases may require an evaluator familiar with legal causation and impairment questions.
Independent medical or psychological evaluations: These have different roles and confidentiality rules from treatment evaluations.
Forensic evaluations should be performed by a clinician with appropriate training who clearly explains the retaining party, limits of confidentiality, and intended use.
Denver Evaluation Timeline and Process
Initial consultation and records: The clinician clarifies the referral question and determines the appropriate battery.
Testing: One or more sessions may be needed depending on age, stamina, and complexity.
Scoring and integration: Results are interpreted with history, observations, records, and rating scales.
Feedback and report: Turnaround varies by provider and should be confirmed before scheduling.
Urgent deadlines: Expedited work may not be available and may carry additional fees.
Denver Insurance Coverage for Evaluations
Coverage depends on medical necessity, diagnosis, provider network status, prior authorization, deductible, and plan exclusions. Educational, gifted, school-admission, career, or Mensa testing is frequently excluded.
Ask the provider for billing codes and a written estimate, then verify benefits with the insurer. Authorization is not a guarantee of payment, and a school evaluation may be available without charge when special-education eligibility is suspected.
Denver Evaluation Referrals
Medical referrals: Primary-care clinicians, pediatricians, neurologists, psychiatrists, rehabilitation specialists, and other treating professionals.
School referrals: Teachers, school psychologists, counselors, special-education teams, and parent requests.
Self-referral: Many private practices accept direct inquiries, although some hospital clinics require a professional referral.
Legal referrals: Attorneys, courts, agencies, or insurers may retain forensic evaluators.
Benefits of a Full Evaluation
Complete picture: Understand the full picture of your or your child's functioning – cognitive, academic, emotional, and behavioral
Accurate diagnosis: Receive precise diagnoses for learning disabilities, ADHD, autism, or other conditions
Legal documentation: Obtain documentation for IEPs, 504 plans, college accommodations, disability claims, or court cases
Personalized recommendations: Receive tailored recommendations for academic planning, career development, therapy, or treatment
Peace of mind: Understand your or your child's strengths and challenges and how to address them effectively
Long-term planning: Use the findings for educational, career, and personal planning
Full Evaluations in Denver
Full evaluations in Denver are used for learning-disability and ADHD assessment, autism and developmental questions, neurological conditions, educational planning, college and testing accommodations, disability documentation, treatment planning, and legal matters.
The correct battery depends on the referral question. A gifted-only assessment, school special-education evaluation, medical neuropsychological evaluation, and forensic evaluation are not interchangeable.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is included in a full evaluation?
A full evaluation typically includes cognitive testing (IQ), academic achievement testing, behavioral and emotional assessments, a clinical interview, and a comprehensive written report with recommendations.
How long does a full evaluation take?
Testing typically takes 2-6 hours, often spread across 2-3 sessions. The entire process from consultation to receiving the report usually takes 2-4 weeks.
What is included in the report?
The report includes background information, test scores, normative comparisons, interpretation of findings, diagnostic impressions (if applicable), and actionable recommendations for academic planning, treatment, or accommodations.
Is a full evaluation the same as an IQ test?
No. A full evaluation is much more comprehensive and includes cognitive testing, academic testing, emotional/behavioral assessments, and a clinical interview. An IQ test only measures cognitive abilities.
Is a full evaluation covered by insurance?
Some insurance plans cover full evaluations when they are deemed medically necessary. Coverage varies by plan and provider. We recommend checking with your insurance provider.
Can a full evaluation help with college accommodations?
Yes. A full evaluation provides the documentation needed for college accommodations, including extended time on exams, note-taking assistance, and other academic support services.
Can a full evaluation be done online?
Some components of a full evaluation can be done via telehealth, but many tests (especially cognitive and achievement tests) require in-person administration for accurate scoring. Contact us for details.
How should I prepare for a full evaluation?
Get a good night's sleep, eat a healthy meal, and arrive relaxed. Bring any relevant documents (previous evaluations, school records, medical history). No specific preparation is needed for the tests themselves.
How much does a full evaluation cost in Denver?
Fees vary widely with the scope of the evaluation, number of sessions, records reviewed, and report requirements. Insurance coverage depends on medical necessity and the plan; request a written estimate.
Can a full evaluation help with IEP or 504 plans?
Yes. A full evaluation provides the comprehensive documentation needed to qualify for IEPs, 504 plans, and other educational accommodations in Denver Public Schools and other districts.