Sensory Profile 2 (SP2) : Age Range: Time To Administer
Sensory Profile 2 (SP2) : Age Range: Time To Administer
Sensory Profile 2 (SP2) : Age Range: Time To Administer
Purpose: The SP2 was designed to determine how a child responds to sensory input, grouping them into sensory
processing patterns that support or may be affecting their ability to function, participate, and perform with the school,
home, and/or community environment. Sensory processing patterns are determined in order to assist with
identification of the child’s strengths and challenges. These can then be used for RtI, eligibility of services, and
intervention planning. The data collected is not designed to monitor progress. There are different norm referenced,
standardized caregiver and/or teacher questionnaires, ranging from infancy through school age:
Caregivers and/or teachers rate behavioral statements on a 5-point Likert scale: Almost Always (5), Frequently (4), Half
the Time (3), Occasionally (2), Almost Never (1) (and Does not apply, 0).
Compiled by: C. Haynes, J. Kornbluth & L. Okonsky; Sept 2016; for EBS Healthcare, Inc.
Sensory Profile 2 (SP2)
Scoring:
Manual scoring typically takes approximately 15 min. Manually completed forms can be entered into the
electronic scoring program. If parent and teacher complete the on-line SP2 forms then they are automatically
scored and results sent to the evaluator.
Raw scores are placed on scale to determine the five descriptive categories for 1. Sensory Patterns Summary
(Quadrants) 2. Sensory and Behavioral Sections 3. School Factors (School Companion only)
o Much less than others – score correlates to 2 standard deviations below the mean, suggesting difficulty
with processing sensory information in this area
o Less than others - score correlates to 1 standard deviations below the mean, suggesting possible
difficulty with processing sensory information in this area
o Just like the majority of others
o More than others - score correlates to 1 standard deviations above the mean, suggesting possible
difficulty with processing sensory information in this area
o Much more than others - score correlates to 2 standard deviations above the mean, suggesting difficulty
with processing sensory information in this area
Percentile score conversions are in the Sensory Profile 2 User’s Manual: Appendix A.
The School Companion categorizes into School Factors:
o School Factor 1: Supports - measures a student’s need for external supports to participate in learning;
often a high amount of sensory input is needed to get ready for learning.
o School Factor 2: Awareness - measures the student’s awareness and attention within the learning
environment; often these students are pulled away from learning due to other stimuli in the room.
o School Factor 3: Tolerance - measures the student’s tolerance within the learning environment, no
longer distractible but avoidant behaviors or hypersensitivity.
o School Factor 4: Availability - measures the student’s availability for learning within the environment as
it relates to disengagement due to avoidant behavior or failure to detect important stimuli to then learn.
Compiled by: C. Haynes, J. Kornbluth & L. Okonsky; Sept 2016; for EBS Healthcare, Inc.
Sensory Profile 2 (SP2)
Interpretation:
Interpretation should be viewed in the context of a full evaluation, including teacher and/or parent report,
classroom and/or clinical observations, etc.
Standardized population of 1,791 children between the ages birth-14.11 years
http://downloads.pearsonclinical.com/images/Assets/SensoryProfile2/Sensory-Profile-2-Technical-Summary.pdf
Reliability: Test-retest reliability was high for Caregiver questionnaires 0.83-0.97 and ranged from 0.66-0.93 for
School Companion. Inter-rater reliability ranged from acceptable to good: 0.49-0.89 (mostly in 0.70s and 0.80s)
for Caregiver questionnaires, and acceptable to excellent: 0.53-0.90 (mostly in the 0.70s-0.90s) for Teachers
completing the School Companion. Internal consistency using Cronbach’s alphas ranged from 0.57-0.93.
Validity: The SP2 correlates significantly with previous Sensory Profiles, BASC-2 PRS & SP2 Child/Short forms,
BASC-2 TRS & SP2 School form, SSIS parent & SP2 Child form, SSIS teacher & SP2 School form, Vineland-II & SP2
Infant, Toddler, & Child forms, and SFA & SP2 School form. There are comparison groups for the Infant &
Toddler forms with children with developmental delays. And, there are comparison groups for the Child &
School Companion forms with children with: Autism, ADHD, Dual diagnosis of ADHD/ASD, LD, Giftedness,
Intellectual Disabilities, Down Syndrome, English as additional language, and other vulnerable conditions.
References:
Haynes, C. and Anderson, M. (2014). Sensory-perceptual assessments. In A. Asher (Ed.), Asher's occupational therapy
assessment tools, An annotated index (4th ed.), (pp 417-18). Bethesda, MD: AOTA Press.
Hughes, S. Introducing Sensory Profile 2. Retrieved from: http://www.theotshow.com/files/innovation._day_2._12.30_shelley_hughes.pdf
Compiled by: C. Haynes, J. Kornbluth & L. Okonsky; Sept 2016; for EBS Healthcare, Inc.