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Test construction and assessment

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1 Test construction and assessment
intelligence Test construction and assessment

2 How do we Assess Intelligence?
Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon set out to figure out a concept called a mental age (what a person of a particular age should know). They discovered that by finding someone’s mental age they can predict future performance. Hoped they could use test to help children, not label them.

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4 Lewis Terman and his IQ Test
Take out a scrap piece of paper. A 8 year old has a mental age of 10, what is her IQ? Answer: 125 A 12 year old has the mental age of 9, what is his IQ? Answer: 75 A boy has the mental age of 10 and an IQ of 200, how old is he? Answer: 5 Used Binet’s research to construct the modern day IQ test called the Stanford-Binet Test.

5 Repeat after me… IQ is just a number

6 Problems with the IQ Formula
It does not really work well on adults, why? If a 60 year old man does as well as an average 30 year old then his IQ would be 50!!!!!! That makes no sense!!!!!

7 Wechsler Intelligence Scales
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-III), ages 16 and older Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-III) for children ages 3-16 both have items that are organized into various subtests. verbal section performance section verbal and performance combined give a single IQ

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10 More IQ Tests California Test of Mental Ability
Language and non-language sections Otis-Lennon Mental Ability Test Mixes factors together Emphasizes verbal aspects of intelligence This is the test used most in Georgia

11 How do we construct Intelligence tests?
Tests must be: Standardized Reliable Valid

12 Modern Tests of Mental Abilities
Aptitude A test designed to predict a person’s future performance. The ability for that person to learn. Achievement A test designed to assess what a person has learned.

13 Standardization The test must be pre-tested to a representative sample of people and Form a normal distribution or bell curve

14 Aptitude and Intelligence Scores

15 Flynn Effect Better nutrition? More education?
More stimulating environments? Smaller families? More parent involvement?

16 Reliability The extent which a test yields consistent results over time. Spilt halves or test–retest method looks at correlation– the higher the correlation = more reliable test

17 Validity The extent to which a test measures what
it is supposed to measure. Content Validity : does the test sample a behavior of interest (driving test & driving tasks Predictive Validity : does the test predict future behavior it was designed to predict? (aka criterion-related validity)

18 Does Intelligence Change Over Time?
By age 3, a child’s IQ can predict adolescent IQ scores. Depends on the type of intelligence, crystallized or fluid. Crystallized: one’s accumulated knowledge and skills; tends to increase with age Fluid: ability to reason speedily and abstractly; tends to decrease with age

19 Intelligence Endures


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