Chapter 5: Validity Flashcards
1
Q
- Define and be able to apply the broad definition of validity.
A
Does your test measure what it reports to measure?
2
Q
- What are the three main types of validity evidence?
A
Construct, criterion, and content
3
Q
- What prerequisites exist for validity?
A
Reliability, variability, correlation
4
Q
- Define Face Validity. How does it differ from other aspects of validity?
A
- Does the test have the appearance of measuring a specific construct.
- Not true validity and you could want high or low face validity based on what you’re testing
5
Q
- Define Content Validity: How is it measured?
A
- Does the test represent a comprehensive look at the construct?
- Measure through CVRs and factor analysis
6
Q
- How do construct underrepresentation and construct-irrelevant variance relate to content validity?
A
- underrepresentation: only getting at part of the construct
- construct-irrelevant variance: other factors relate to non-item pieces that effect correct answers (length of test, where items are in the test)
7
Q
- What is the content validity ratio and how is it calculated?
A
- Number of items rated as essential, creates content validity
- (Essential questions - N/2)/N/2
8
Q
- What is a criterion? What is Criterion-related Validity?
A
- criterion: the standard a test is compared against
- criterion-related validity: How well does your test relate to some outside criterion?
9
Q
- Name and define the three subtypes of criterion related validity. Be able to give examples.
A
- Predictive: accuracy in using a test score to predict a criterion obtained later (SAT predicting college GPA)
- Concurrent: how related a test score is to the criterion as measured at the same time (job performance)
- Postdictive: accuracy of a test score in predicting a previously acquired criterion (ASPD scale in predicting criminal behavior)
10
Q
- What is the validity coefficient? What is the meaning of a squared validity coefficient?
A
- validity coefficient: The correlation between a tests and a criterion
- validity coefficient squared: Percent of variation in criterion we can know because of knowing the test score/ coefficient of determination/R-squared
11
Q
- What is incremental validity?
A
How much does your measure add to the literature (new info on the client, construct, price. etc.)
12
Q
- What is a construct? What is Construct-related Validity?
A
an idea/phenomenon a test is measuring
Construct-related validity: how well does your measure for that construct
13
Q
- What are the two types of evidence in construct validity?
A
Convergent and discriminant validity
14
Q
- How are the two types of evidence for construct-validity defined and how are they different from one another?
A
- Convergent: measures of the same construct converge or narrow in on the same thing, shows that a test measures the same thing as other tests
- Discriminant: low correlations with measure of unrelated constructs or evidence for what the test does not measure
15
Q
- What is the relationship between reliability and validity?
A
A test must be reliable to be valid, but reliability does not equate to validity