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Psychometric Theory

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Standard Deviation the average difference (distance) between scores and the mean. ... Deviation IQ of 130 is the same as a score of 140 on the GATB scale. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychometric Theory


1
Psychometric Theory
  • Seminar in Vocational Assessment
  • (BCE 545)
  • March 4, 2002

2
What is a test?
  • A way of measuring something.
  • A means for gathering information.
  • A means for evaluating performance
  • A means for making decisions
  • Psychometric (mind-measure) Testsmeasure traits
    of individuals that relating to emotion and
    cognition.

3
What makes a good test?
  • A good test should be
  • Valid
  • Reliable

4
Test Validity
5
What is Validity?
  • Validity is the extent to which a test actually
    measures the attribute for which it is designed.

6
Types of Validity
  • Construct Validity
  • Content Validity
  • Predictive Validity
  • Criterion-Related Validity
  • Incremental or Criterion-Related Validity
  • Face Validity

7
Construct Validity
  • Is the operant definition of the trait being
    measured legitimate?

8
Content Validity
  • Is the test broad enough to measure all of the
    components of the construct (trait) being
    measured?

9
Predictive Validity
  • Is the test capable of predicting performance in
    observable events?

10
Incremental or Criterion-Related Validity
  • Similar to predictive validity, criterion-related
    validity refers to the ability of a test to
    predict success/failure through cutoff scores
    or categories.

11
Face Validity
  • Does the test look like it is valid?
  • (especially important with work samples)

12
Measuring Validity
  • Validity is addressed in the tests
    administration or users manual.
  • Construct/content validity is addressed through
    documenting the tests constructioncitations,
    definitions, descriptions of theory, etc.
  • Incremental Validity can be measured
    statisticallywith a validity coefficient
    (.01-.99)
  • Face ValidityIn the eye of the beholder.

13
Reliability
14
Reliability
  • Is an individuals performance on a test
    consistent over time?
  • An individuals performance should remain
    constant on a valid test provided that testing
    conditions are consistent and no new learning has
    taken place.
  • Tests that are valid are also, by necessity,
    reliablebut tests that are reliable are not
    necessarily valid.

15
Types of Reliability
  • Split-Half Reliability (measure of internal
    consistency of a test)
  • Test-Retest reliability
  • Test-Retest with alternate forms of the test.

16
Split-Half
  • An individuals scores on even-numbered items is
    correlated with scores on odd-numbered items.
  • Statistic Used Cronbachs Alpha (correlation
    coefficient).

17
Test-Retest Reliability
  • Test is administered to a group of subjects and
    readministered within 1-2 weeks. Scores of the
    two tests are correlated.
  • Sometimes uses parallel forms of test.
  • Test Statistic Kuder-Richardson correlation
    coefficient (usually KR-20 or KR-21)

18
Assessing Reliability
  • Correlation coefficient (-1.0 - 1.0)
  • For reliability, reliability coefficient is a
    score between 0 and 1.
  • How good is the reliability coefficient?
  • 0.80-1.00 Very High Correlation
  • 0.60-0.79 Substantial Correlation
  • 0.40-0.59 Moderate Correlation
  • 0.20-0.19 Little Correlation
  • 0.00-0.19 No Correlation

19
Considering the value or appropriateness of a test
  • Investigate the validityespecially the
    constructs on which the test is based. Is it
    well researched and constructed?
  • Look at the reliabilityis the test consistent?
  • View the test instrument itself, or better, take
    the testwhat is the face validity?
  • Is the test appropriate for the
    individual/population you are assessing?

20
Norms and Standardization
21
What is standardization?
  • Everyone who takes a test is assessed under the
    same standards
  • Standards of environment
  • Standards of instruction/assistance
  • Standards of assessing test performance
  • Standards of comparison (norms)

22
What are norms?
  • Norms are the standards for evaluating an
    individuals performance on an instrument (test).
  • Who are norms based on?
  • Anyone that can form a group. Examples
  • Workers in a certain job.
  • School Classrooms
  • Geographic Location
  • Culture/Ethnic Characteristics

23
Which norms should you use?
  • Many tests give a variety of options.
  • Choose the one that is most in common with
  • Individual Characteristics
  • Individual Goals (where will the individual be
    applying the attribute?)

24
Maintaining Standardization
  • Putting the person in the norm group.
  • Manual will give specific guidelines as to
  • Environmental conditions in which the test should
    be taken.
  • Specific instructions to be read/provided to the
    test-taker.
  • Instructions for answering questions, giving
    assistance, scoring the instrument.

25
Standard Scores
  • Standard scores are a means by which raw scores
    (such as number of right answers) can be compared
    to a norm group.
  • Standard scores also provide a means for
    converting scores on two tests so that they may
    be compared to each other on a unit-to-unit
    basis.
  • See Page 102 in text

26
Percentiles
  • Percentiles indicate the proportion of scores
    that lie at or below a particular score.
  • Example A score at the 75th percentile is as
    high or higher than 75/100 of scores recorded for
    the test.
  • Percentiles and performance (traditional)
  • 0-33 ileBelow Average
  • 34-67ileAverage
  • 68-99ileAbove Average

27
The Normal (Bell) Curve
  • Characteristics
  • Symmetrical
  • Unimodalhas one high point mean (average
    score), median and mode are all the same in a
    normal curve.
  • Infinitethe tails of the normal curve go on
    forever.
  • Certain percentage of curve will fall within one
    two or three standard deviations of the mean.

28
Standard Deviations and Z-Scores
  • Standard Deviationthe average difference
    (distance) between scores and the mean.
  • In a normal curve, approximately 34 of scores
    will fall within one standard deviation above OR
    below the mean 14 within the next standard
    deviation, and 2 within the next standard
    deviation.
  • The mean is at the 50th ile.
  • A z-score represents the number of standard
    deviations an individuals score is away from the
    meanit is the most basic standard score.

29
Z-scores can be easily converted into raw scores
or rough percentiles.
  • If you know the Z-score, the standard deviation,
    and the mean, you can figure a raw score
  • Multiply the standard deviation by the z-score.
  • If the z-score is negative, subtract this product
    from the mean score.
  • If the z-score is positive, add the mean to this
    product.
  • The result is the raw score.
  • The z-score indicates how many standard
    deviations an individual is from the mean using
    the 34/14/2 rule, you can have a rough idea of
    the percentile at which this score lies on the
    normal curve.

30
Other Standard Scores
  • T-score Mean of 50 standard deviation of 10.
  • Deviation IQ score Mean of 100, standard
    deviation of 15.
  • Weschler Subtest Score Mean of 10, standard
    deviation of 3.
  • GATB/AGCT Score Mean of 100, standard deviation
    of 20

31
Converting Scores between Scales
  • Convert the raw score to a z-score by determining
    the number of standard deviations away from the
    mean the raw score lies (positive or negative).
  • Determine the standard deviation and mean of the
    scale to which you are converting.
  • Multiply the z-score by the standard deviation of
    the scale to which you are converting.
  • Add the mean of the scale to which you are
    converting if the score is positive.
  • Subtract from the mean if the score is negative.

32
Example
  • What is the equivalent GATB score for a Deviation
    IQ score of 130?
  • Deviation IQ Mean 100 sd 15
  • Score is 30 points above the mean
  • 30/15 2.0 this is the z score.
  • GATB Mean 100 sd 20.
  • Multiply GATB sd by z score 2.0 x 20 40
  • Because the raw score was above the mean, we add
    the mean to the product 100 40 140
  • Deviation IQ of 130 is the same as a score of 140
    on the GATB scale.
  • By the way, at what percentile would this score
    lie?
  • Is it the same percentile on both scales?
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