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Peer reviewedAllen, Robert M. – Journal of Personality Assessment, 1975
The inkblot method was used to differentiate how a person, who is considered retarded from the viewpoint of measured intelligence, deals with familiar and unfamiliar problems. The language and mode of perceiving, organizing, and responding of an individual while problem solving is emphasized. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Children, Elementary Secondary Education, Intelligence Tests, Language Ability
Miller, David N.; Nickerson, Amanda B. – California School Psychologist, 2006
Projective techniques continue to be widely used by school psychologists despite frequent criticisms of their use. This article reviews contemporary validity issues in the use of projective techniques with children and adolescents, including incremental validity, treatment validity, and problems associated with professional judgment and…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Validity, Projective Measures, School Psychology

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