The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-V) is the gold-standard individual IQ test for school-age children. Administered one-on-one by a licensed psychologist, it generates a Full Scale IQ (FSIQ) plus five index scores. Used for gifted identification, learning disability assessment, and educational planning. This guide explains every index and subtest.
Quick Facts
Exam Structure
Five indices, each contributing 20% of the Full Scale IQ. Each index isolates a distinct cognitive domain. Understanding the structure helps you understand your child's cognitive profile.
Full Content Outline
Every core subtest your child will encounter, with what each one tests and an example question type. Click each index to expand the full detail.
Prep Timeline
15–20 minutes per day, 4–5 days per week. Build each cognitive skill progressively over five weeks.
Note: WISC-V is individually administered by a licensed psychologist. The preparation activities below build the underlying cognitive skills — they are not "WISC-V practice tests" (which would not be appropriate). These are general cognitive development activities appropriate for children.
Explore our free cognitive reasoning practice questions — similar skills to what the WISC-V tests.
Score Interpretation
The WISC-V generates a Full Scale IQ and five separate index scores. Understanding each helps you read a psychologist's report.
Full Scale IQ (FSIQ)
Mean 100, SD 15. 130+ = Very Superior (gifted). 120–129 = Superior. Most gifted programs require FSIQ ≥ 130 (98th percentile).
120–129
Superior
130–144
Very Superior
145+
Exceptionally Gifted
Five Index Scores
Each index (VCI, VSI, FRI, WMI, PSI) is scored separately on the same 100/15 scale. A significant scatter between indices (15+ points) is diagnostically meaningful — it may indicate a learning profile or giftedness with a specific weakness.
Extended Ability Scale (EAS)
For exceptionally gifted children, the EAS extends scoring above the standard ceiling to accurately measure very high IQ scores that would otherwise be capped. Useful when the standard FSIQ may underestimate ability.
Study Materials
Handpicked study guides. Affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
WISC-V Assessment and Interpretation
Professional guide to interpreting all five index scores and understanding cognitive profiles from WISC-V results.
Bright Kids WISC-V Practice Test and Parent Guide
Cognitive skill-building activities and sample questions that develop the abilities measured across all five WISC-V indices.
Common Questions
The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children — Fifth Edition (WISC-V) is an individually administered IQ test for children ages 6–16. It is administered by a licensed psychologist and produces a Full Scale IQ (FSIQ) plus five index scores measuring distinct cognitive abilities.
The CogAT is a group-administered academic reasoning test used for gifted screening in schools. The WISC-V is an individually administered IQ test given by a psychologist. WISC-V is more comprehensive, takes longer, and produces clinical-grade diagnostic information including learning disability profiles.
Most gifted programs use FSIQ ≥ 130 (98th percentile, 2 standard deviations above the mean). Some highly selective programs require 135+ or 140+. A score of 120–129 is "Superior" and may still qualify for accelerated programming at many schools.
The core 10-subtest battery typically takes 60–90 minutes. If supplemental subtests are added (for a fuller diagnostic picture), it can take up to 2 hours. The assessment is one-on-one with a psychologist.
Direct test prep (drilling WISC-V items) is not appropriate and can invalidate results. However, activities that build vocabulary, spatial reasoning, memory, and processing speed develop the underlying cognitive skills the test measures. These activities are beneficial regardless of whether a child is being tested.
The five WISC-V indices are: Verbal Comprehension (VCI) — word knowledge and verbal reasoning; Visual Spatial (VSI) — spatial perception and visual analysis; Fluid Reasoning (FRI) — abstract and inductive reasoning; Working Memory (WMI) — attention and mental manipulation; Processing Speed (PSI) — speed and accuracy of visual tasks.