Assessing Psychometric Fitness of Intelligence Tests - Canivez, Gary L.; (szerk.) - Prospero Internetes Könyváruház

 
A termék adatai:

ISBN13:9781538145715
ISBN10:1538145715
Kötéstípus:Keménykötés
Terjedelem:390 oldal
Méret:254x177 mm
Nyelv:angol
Illusztrációk: 36 BW Illustrations, 36 BW Illustrations, 23 Tables, 23 Tables
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Témakör:

Assessing Psychometric Fitness of Intelligence Tests

Toward Evidence-Based Interpretation Practices
 
Kiadó: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
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Kötetek száma: Hardback
 
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Assessing Psychometric Fitness of Intelligence Tests: Toward Evidence-Based Interpretation Practices addresses issues and concerns regarding appropriate ethical and scientific underpinnings for the appropriate interpretation of intelligence tests. Ethical test interpretation requires test users to consider the empirical evidence for individual and all test score comparisons and to make appropriate clinical decisions accordingly. This requires test users to have competencies in advanced psychometric principles. The chapters in this edited volume present a variety of topics, including the intersection of ethical principles, test standards, and psychometric properties that guide evidence-based interpretation; surveys of empirical evidence in the literature for qualifying major intelligence test interpretations, and psychological measurement topics that impact psychometric understanding of what current intelligence tests can and cannot do. This critical discussion has implications for basic undergraduate and graduate instruction, as well as supervision in clinical and research applications.

Tartalomjegyzék:

Acknowledgments

Preface

Chapter 1: Ethics, Test Standards, and Test Interpretation: Measurement Matters!Gary L. Canivez

Ethical Principles Related to Measurement and Assessment

Test Standards

Measurement Principles and Procedures

Reliability

Validity

Diagnostic Utility

Test Bias and Test Fairness

Norms

Summary and Conclusion

Chapter 2: Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children?Fifth Edition: Psychometric Fitness and Evidence-Based Interpretation Gary L. Canivez

Development of the WISC?V

WISC?V Psychometric Properties

WISC?V Diagnostic Utility and Treatment Utility

Summary, Conclusions, and Recommendations

Chapter 3: Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children-Second Edition/Normative Update (KABC?II/ KABC?II NU): Clinical Interpretation from an Evidence-Based Perspective Ryan J. McGill and Stefan C. Dombrowski

Suggested Interpretive Procedures for the Instrument

Issues with the Development and Validation of the KABC?II

Variance Partitioning and the Interpretive Relevance of Lower-Order Dimensions

Post-Publication KABC?II Psychometric Evidence

Implications of Dimensional Complexity for Clinical Interpretation

Conclusion

Chapter 4: The Woodcock-Johnson IV Tests of Cognitive Abilities: A Paradox for Evidence-Based Assessment Stefan C. Dombrowski, Ryan J. McGill, and Corinne J. Casey

The WJ IV Tests of Cognitive Abilities

Recapitulation of CHC Structural Validity Concerns

Independent Factor Analytic Research Findings

Evidence-based Interpretation in the Face of Multidimensional Complexity

Conclusion

Chapter 5: Utility of Intelligence Tests for the Determination of Eligibility for Special Education and Related Services John H. Kranzler and Randy G. Floyd

Aims of this Chapter

Intelligence Test Interpretation

Utility of Intelligence Tests in the Schools

Conclusion

Chapter 6: From Spearman to Watkins: The Never-Ending Fight Against Faculty Psychology A. Alexander Beaujean

Score Profiles

Early History of Intellective Profiles

Spearman's Critique

Conclusion

Chapter 7: From Eminence to Evidence: Bridging the Research to Practice Gap in Intelligence Testing Nicholas Benson

Historical Trends: The More Things Change, the More They Remain the Same

The Promise of Evidence-Based Practice

Scientific Attitudes and the Promotion of Evidence-Based Assessment

Chapter 8: Unreliable Differences: Considering the Reliability of Discrepancy Scores Ryan L. Farmer and Samuel Y. Kim

Reliability: A Brief Overview

Reliability in Intelligence Tests

Conclusion

Chapter 9: Nunnally Got it Right the First Time: Internal Consistency Reliability of .55 is Acceptable for Research Purposes Gilles E. Gignac

Background on Internal Consistency Reliability

Reliability Guidelines

Comparisons with Other Reliability Guidelines

One What Basis Might Criterion-Based Reliability Guidelines Be Provided?

Estimating Test Score Reliability from Dichotomously Scored Items

Limitations & Final Considerations

Conclusion

Chapter 10: The Incorporation of Inspection Time with Standardized Batteries of Intelligence Joseph C. Kush

Overview

Defining Human Intelligence

Intelligence and IQ Tests

Criterion Validity: Using IQ Tests to Make Predictions

An Alternative to Traditional IQ Tests; The Assessment of Basic Cognitive Processes

Inspection Time

The Best of Both Worlds

Chapter 11: How Intelligence Tests Can be Used to Predict Education and Can be Assessed Through Education Jonathan Wai and Frank C. Worrell

The ?Jangle Fallacy?: Measurement overlap Between Standardized Ability and Achievement Tests

Prospective Prediction of General Mental Ability on Outcomes Within the Top 1%

Results and Discussion

Retrospective Examination of Educational Selectivity of High Achieving Occupational Groups

Conclusion

Chapter 12: The Improper Use of IQ in Debates and Discussions About Race and Gender Differences in Internet or Mass Media Marco Tommasi, Lina Pezzuti, and Aristide Saggino

The Internet and the Debate About the Relation Between IQ and Race

Interference of External Institutions on Intelligence Studies

Clear Definition of Intelligence, g, and IQ

Which IQ?

IQ Should be Estimated on Representative Samples

Many Results in Studies About IQ are Interpreted, Not Explained

Nature or Nurture?

IQ and Gender

The Minnesota Transracial Adoption Study

IQ is Affected by Environmental Factors or by Individual Characteristics

The Steve Jobs? Paradox

Conclusion: What We Can and Cannot Say About IQ

Index

About the Editor

About the Contributors