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Chapter Five. Measurement Concepts. Terms. Reliability True Score Measurement Error. How Can we assess Reliability. Test-Retest Reliability Internal Consistency Reliability Split half reliability Cronbach’s alpha Inter-rater reliability. Reliability vs. Validity.
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Chapter Five Measurement Concepts
Terms • Reliability • True Score • Measurement Error
How Can we assess Reliability • Test-Retest Reliability • Internal Consistency Reliability • Split half reliability • Cronbach’s alpha • Inter-rater reliability
Reliability vs. Validity • Reliability-consistency of the measure • Validity-truth---does the study measure what it says it will measure…is it valid • ****A measure can be reliable and not valid, but it canno be valid unless it is reliable.
Construct validity the adequacy of the operational definitions of variables • Criterion-Oriented Validity- examining the relationship between scores on a measure and some criterion.
Indicators of Validity • Face validity tells whether the measure appears to measure what it is suppose to.. • Four types of Criterion-related research approaches
Types of Criterion-oriented research approaches • Predictive Validity • Concurrent Validity • Convergent Validity • Discriminant Validity
Predictor Validity- research measuring the extent to which the measure allows you to predict future behaviors. (SAT) • Concurrent Validity-examines the relationship between the measure and a criterion at the same time. • research whether two or more groups of people differ on a measure in expected ways. • Convergent validity when a measure relates to other scores of the same or similar constructs in a meaningful and predicted way. • Shy Q scores and Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale • Discriminant validity the measure should discriminate between the construct being measured and other non-related constructs. • Shy Q and Zuckerman’s Sensation seeking Scale.
Variables & Measurement Scales • Nominal scales have no numerical or quantitative properties, they are naming scales, and their only property is identity . • Ordinal scales tell us about the relative order of magnitude, but they do not give us info about the differences b/t categories or ranks. • Interval scale the measurement conveys info about the order and the distance b/t the values • Ratio scales have all the properties of the previous scales and a true zero point that indicates the absence of the variable being measured