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  2. Validity (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Validity_(statistics)

    Face validity is very closely related to content validity. While content validity depends on a theoretical basis for assuming if a test is assessing all domains of a certain criterion (e.g. does assessing addition skills yield in a good measure for mathematical skills? To answer this you have to know, what different kinds of arithmetic skills ...

  3. Content validity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_validity

    Content validity is most often addressed in academic and vocational testing, where test items need to reflect the knowledge actually required for a given topic area (e.g., history) or job skill (e.g., accounting). In clinical settings, content validity refers to the correspondence between test items and the symptom content of a syndrome.

  4. Test validity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test_validity

    Test validity is the extent to which a test (such as a chemical, physical, or scholastic test) accurately measures what it is supposed to measure.In the fields of psychological testing and educational testing, "validity refers to the degree to which evidence and theory support the interpretations of test scores entailed by proposed uses of tests". [1]

  5. Linguistic validation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_validation

    The exercise is also an important tool for demonstrating content validity when compared with the source. During the interview, the respondents complete the questionnaire, and then answer a series of open-ended questions on its content and explain what they think each item means in their own words.

  6. Achievement test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achievement_test

    The goal of item writers is to create test items that measure the most important skills and knowledge attained in a given grade-level. The number and type of test items written is determined by the grade-level content standards. Content validity is determined by the representativeness of the items included on the final test.

  7. Validity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Validity

    Test validity, validity in educational and psychological testing; Face validity, the property of a test intended to measure something; Construct validity, refers to whether a scale measures or correlates with the theorized psychological construct it measures; Content validity, the extent to which a measure represents all facets of a given construct

  8. Cronbach's alpha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cronbach's_alpha

    The term "internal consistency" is commonly used in the reliability literature, but its meaning is not clearly defined. The term is sometimes used to refer to a certain kind of reliability (e.g., internal consistency reliability), but it is unclear exactly which reliability coefficients are included here, in addition to ρ T {\displaystyle \rho ...

  9. Content analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_analysis

    The data collection instrument used in content analysis is the codebook or coding scheme. In qualitative content analysis the codebook is constructed and improved during coding, while in quantitative content analysis the codebook needs to be developed and pretested for reliability and validity before coding. [4]