I'm a psychology intern learning to administer the WAIS-IV and the timed subtests are stressing me out during practice sessions. Every time I'm watching the clock, trying to score, and paying attention to the examinee simultaneously, I feel like I'm dropping one of those balls.
The block design and matrix reasoning subtests are giving me the most trouble. The 120-second limit feels tight when I'm also trying to record observations and manage the materials at the same time. My notes end up sloppy and I second-guess my scoring after the fact.
I found a wais practice test resource that helped me understand the structure and scoring logic better, but translating that into smooth live administration is a completely different challenge. There's a coordination element that just doesn't come through in written prep.
My supervisor says the timing anxiety fades with practice but I've only done 8 full administrations and I'm not feeling the curve yet. Around how many does it actually start to feel automatic?
8 administrations is really early in the learning curve. Most clinical programs don't expect polished administration until around 20 full protocols. You're probably further along than you feel - the anxiety at this stage is basically universal.
Block design gets fast with repetition. Around administration 15 or so I stopped actively thinking about the timer and just knew where I was in the sequence. It's more of a motor skill than a cognitive one once the layout is internalized.
Get a stopwatch you can start and stop without looking at it. That one change freed me up to watch the examinee and write simultaneously. Once I stopped stealing glances at the time, everything else got easier pretty quickly.
The timing rule is strict per standardization protocol - you stop the examinee at 120 seconds even if they're mid-item. No flexibility there. Consistent timing is part of what makes the normative data valid, so there's no workaround.