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Kneeland, Steven J. – CTM: The Human Element, 1981
Examines the role of psychological testing within the business environment. Outlines four guidelines for people who use tests to make decisions about other people: (1) use a broad-brush approach; (2) look for the whole person; (3) do not rely on testing alone; and (4) let people see their results. (CT)
Descriptors: Guidelines, Personnel Evaluation, Psychological Testing, Test Interpretation
Peer reviewedButcher, James N. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1985
Psychological assessment, a subspecialty of psychology has served as one of the earliest proving grounds of automated technology. This Special Series highlights some of the advances in computerized psychological assessment methods and discusses some of the lingering issues and contemporary problems with automated psychological assessment…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Personality Measures, Psychological Testing, Test Interpretation
Peer reviewedAnastasi, Anne – Public Personnel Management, 1989
Discusses the changes in psychological testing and the rapidity of their development. Describes trends in the role of the test user, technical methodology of test construction, and interpretation of test scores. (Author)
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Psychological Testing, Scores, Test Construction
Peer reviewedMessick, Samuel – American Psychologist, 1980
Discusses evaluation of tests both in terms of their measurement properties and their potential social consequences. Presents a model for evaluating test validity based on empirical evidence as well as on ethical decisions. Stresses the importance of construct validity as a rational foundation for test predictiveness and relevance; and the…
Descriptors: Educational Diagnosis, Educational Testing, Ethics, Psychological Testing
Peer reviewedNevid, Jeffrey S. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1983
Responds to an article questioning the construct validity of the Beck Hopelessness Scale. Suggests that social desirability should not be invoked as a potential confound unless the obtained covariation is theoretically inconsistent or is so overlapping as to make the respective scales redundant with respect to factorial content. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Opinions, Psychological Testing, Research Methodology, Social Influences
Peer reviewedLinehan, Marsha M.; Nielsen, Stevan L. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1983
States that the correlation between social desirability (SD) and hopelessness is open to several interpretations, but, in the absence of further data, concern for false-negative rates dictates caution in interpreting hopelessness scores when assessing suicidal behavior. Presents data on the relationship of SD, hopelessness, and prediction of…
Descriptors: Opinions, Predictive Measurement, Psychological Testing, Research Methodology
Peer reviewedVeiel, H.; Coles, E. M. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1982
Definitions of projective tests are critiqued. A distinction is made between projective tests and projective techniques. The unique feature of the latter is its scoring process: response categories are intensionally defined and comprise infinite sets of responses. A continuity from psychometric to projective tests is argued. Statistical…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Diagnostic Tests, Personality Measures, Projective Measures
Peer reviewedTryon, Warren W. – American Psychologist, 1979
This article criticizes the generally held assumption that psychological test scores are trait measures. Reasons for the continuing belief in this fallacy, as well as the social consequences of its general acceptance, are discussed. Suggestions for avoiding the test-trait fallacy are made. (EB)
Descriptors: Majority Attitudes, Opinions, Psychological Testing, Research Reviews (Publications)
Peer reviewedKonold, Timothy R.; Maller, Susan J.; Glutting, Joseph J. – Journal of School Psychology, 1998
Two nested structural models are developed to determine whether test-session behaviors affect the manner in which intelligence is measured or influence the constructs being measured. Results indicate that test-session behaviors play a larger role influencing the mechanisms of measurement than on the constructs of intelligence. (Author/EMK)
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Testing, Intelligence
Peer reviewedObrzut, Ann – School Psychology Review, 1981
Neuropsychological tests taping intellectual, language, perceptual, and motor processing of a learning disabled child are described. The use of the test results to formulate remedial strategies is outlined. The application of ideas presented by other authors in the Summer 1981 issue of "School Psychology Review" is demonstrated. (Author/AL)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Dyslexia, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Education
Dent, Harold E.; Williams, Robert L. – 1973
The psychological testing of blacks and other minorities inflicts dehumanization upon them by subjecting them to culturally-biased examinations. These tests are defended on "scientific" grounds, although it is evident that they are simply a form of institutionalized racism. Standardized tests of intelligence reflect a middle-class white bias that…
Descriptors: Black Students, Blacks, Equal Education, Intelligence Tests
Ulrey, Gordon – 1980
This paper discusses the impact of emerging developmental skills on preschoolers' test performance in reference to preoperational thinking, behavioral controls, and language skills. It is emphasized that some behaviors that occur during the preschool period may suggest pathology when observed in older children but are normal for preschoolers. A…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Clinical Diagnosis, Cognitive Development, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedGenshaft, Judy L.; Flanagan, Dawn P. – School Psychology Review, 1997
Purpose of mini-series is to present current conceptualizations of the structure of intelligence, new research on human cognitive abilities and their interpretations, and pertinent, practical considerations regarding the use of intelligence tests in schools. Discusses educational-policy issues as well as diagnostic and treatment-utility issues.…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Educational Policy, Group Testing, Intelligence Tests
Hilliard, Asa G., III – 1979
The standardized IQ tests which are in use in the schools are scientifically and pedagogically without merit. The construct "intelligence" is a hypothetical notion whose valid expression has yet to be born. IQ tests and the construct of intelligence can be discarded at present, and teaching strategies would be unaffected. To successful teachers…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Identification, Intelligence, Intelligence Quotient
Regarding Psychologists Testily: Legal Regulation of Psychological Assessment in the Public Schools.
Peer reviewedBersoff, Donald N. – Maryland Law Review, 1979
Surveys recent judicial examinations of educational practices, considers the role of psychological testing in efforts to block desegregation, and evaluates legislation concerning the testing process. Available from Maryland Law Review, Inc., University of Maryland School of Law, 500 West Baltimore St., Baltimore, MD 21201. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, Intelligence Tests
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