NCE Items
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- ratio vs. interval reinforcement schedule
-
ratio - based on number of responses
interval - based on time elapsed -
fixed vs. variable
reinforcement schedule -
fixed - implies reinforcement always (takes place after fixed number or time)
variable - implies an average number or time frame is used - Premack principle
-
"an efficient reinforcer is what the client likes to do"
LPB - low probability behavior
HPB - high probability behavior - higer order conditioning
- when a new stimulus is paired with CS and the new stimulus takes on the power of the CS
- operant
-
B.F.Skinner.
a behavior which is not elicited by an obvious stimulus
(vs. respondant - consequence of a known stimulant) - Robert Carkhuff
- creator of 5 point scale: empathy, genuineness, concreteness, respect
- congruence
-
genuine, real, authentic
(characteristic of counselor) - biofeedback device
-
does not change client, but provides biological information.
used primarily to teach clients to relax or to control ANS function. - Robert Kegan
-
"holding environment" (in counseling)
client can make meaning in the face of a crisis and can find new direction
suggests 6 stages of life span development (incorporative, impulsive, imperial, interpersonal, institutional, and interindividual) - maturational view
-
(that of plant growth)
mind driven by instinct. the environment provided nourishment, placing limitations.
counselors allow clients to work through early conflicts - equilibration
-
Piaget.
balance between assimilation (taking in new information) and accommodation (modification of cognitive structure) - critical period
-
Konrad Lorenz.
makes imprinting possible.
signifies a special time when a behavior must be learned or it wont be learned at all - learned helplessness
-
Martin Seligman.
a pattern in which a person is exposed to situations that he is truly powerless to change.
believes he has no control - fixation
-
Freud.
when development comes to a halt... when frustration and anxiety are too great... the client remains in a stage where he feels safe - Daniel J. Levinson
-
80% of men experience moderate-severe mid life crisis.
views the crisis as somewhat (+), pointing out that men who do not face it may stagnate -
Eric Erikson.
view of ego identity - ego strives to produce a unique autonomous self. it is not content with the mere assimulation of parental views
- BASIC-ID
-
Arnold Lazarus
behaviorist approach. feels couneling is multimodal, relying on a variety of therapeutic techniques:
Behavior
Affective response
Sensations
Imagery
Cognitions
Interpersonal relationships
Drugs - symbolic schema
-
Piaget.
preoperational stage
a cognitive structure that grows with life experience
allows language and symbolism in play to occur - centration
-
Piaget.
preoperational stage
focusing on a key figure of a given object while not noticing the rest of it - Konrad Lorenz
-
ethnology - the study of animal behavior in their natural environment
*imprinting - instinct... infant instinctively follows the first moving object it encounters
illustrated the point of "critical periods" - empiricists
-
(-> behaviorism)
believe development consists of quantitative changes.
scientists can only learn from objective facts
experience is the source for acquiring knowledge - organismic theorists
- qualitative (measure of internal changes) rather than quantitative
- sensorimotor
-
Piaget
0-2 years
reflex
"practical intelligence"
object permanance (>8 months)
representational thought
concept of time (one event takes place before or after another)
causality - instinctual
- behavior than manifests itself in all normal members of a given species (innate, unlearned behaviors)
- duty to warn
-
Tarasoff
a client in immeinent danger to self or others (may contact anothr party to prevent the dangerous situation) - privileged communication
-
CLIENT chooses disclosure
anything said to a counselor by a client will not need to be divulged outside the counseling setting
*qualified - exceptions may exist -
DMS-IV
multi-axial classification -
I-clinical syndromes, V codes
II-developmental / personality disorders
III-physical disorders / conditions
IV-severity of psychological stressors
V-GAF - V codes
-
the focus of treatment, but not attributable to a mental condition
(marital problems, malingering, etc... day to day problems, not psychological disorders) - CPT
-
current procedural terminology
includes the nature of the treatment; may include length of service time - mental health consultation
-
Caplan
"psychodynamic"
consultant does not see the client but advises the consultee - SCII
-
Strong Interest Inventory
measures interest, not ability
based on Holland's typology
untimed
forced choice format (like, indifferent, unlike) - Kuder Career Search
- Interest Inventory
-
ASVAB
DAT
GATB -
Armed Service Vocational Aptitude Battery
Differental Aptitude Test
General Aptitude Test Battery (used by state employment) - trait factor theory
-
Parson, Williamson, Patterson
assumed that via psychological testing one's personality could be matched to an occupation which stressed those particular traits - trait-factor approach
-
Parsons, Williamson, Patterson
attempts to match worker and work environment (job factors)
relies heavily on testing
*one time process
structural theory
differential psychology - Holland
-
believed personality must be congruent with the environment
6 personality types:
Realistic - machines
Investigative - research, think
Conventional - conform, structure, rules
Enterprising - leaders
Artistic -
Social - interpersonal skills - Donald Super
-
career development... longitudinal, reversible
emphasizes self-concept
5 life stages:
Growth
Exploration (15-24y)
Establishment (24-44y)
Maintenance (44-64y)
Decline (65+) - Anne Roe
-
career choice influenced by:
genetics
parent-child interaction (parenting styles)
unconscious motives
current needs
interests
education
intelligence
Maslow's hierarchy - Roe's parenting styles
-
overprotective
avoidant
acceptant
one develops a personality that gravitates (or not) to others - A.A.Brill
-
personality theory of career choice
*psychoanalytic
brings Freud's theory to career counseling - emphasizes sublimation (when one expresses an unacceptable need in a socially acceptable manner) - sublimation
- when a person acts out an unconscious impulse in a socially acceptible manner
-
Tiedman
O'Hara -
decision making theory of career choice
*individual has the power to choose
(1) anticipation
(2) implimentation / adjustment - John Krumboltz
-
behavioristic model
social learning approach to career choice (bandura)
*modeling
*decision making is a skill that can be learned - Edwin Bordin
-
emphasized unconscious mind career choice could solve unconscious conflicts (similar to Roe)
*psychoanalytic
difficulties related to job choice are indicative of neurotic symptoms - Henry Murray
-
"needs-press" theory
*the occupation is used to meet a person's current need
TAT projective test - pioneers of developmental approach to career counseling
-
Eli Ginzberg
Sol Ginsburg
Sidney Axelrod
John Herma - longitudinal approach to career counseling
-
Super
Tiedman
O'Hara - John Crites
- research in career maturity
- Gelatt Decision Model
-
information is the fuel of the decision. although career choice is ongoing, there are times when a key decision must be made
information can be organized into three systems:
predictive (probable alternatives, actions)
value (preference)
decision (rules for evaluation) - DOT
-
Dictionary of Occupational Titles
9 digits
first three: occupational group
second three: tasks / skills
last three: alphabetize - OOH
-
Occupational Outlook Handbook
highlights: factors of the job, necessary training, earnings
*easiest guide to read - GOE
-
Guide for Occupational Exploration
12 interest areas - contrast effect
- interviewers perception of interviewee affected by previous
- compensatory effect
- compensates for things not allowed at the job
- spillover effect
- engages in activities similar to work in leisure time
- culture
-
that which distinguishes one group from another (that which characterized a group):
customs, values, attitudes, beliefs - contextualism
- behavior must be assessed in the context of the culture in which it occurred
- frustration-aggression theory
-
Dollard / Miller.
frustration - occurs when one is blocked so cannot reach one's goal - cognitive-dissonance theory
-
Festinger.
dissonance - state of inconsistency / incompatibility
reduced by denial - folkways vs. mores
-
folkways - describe correct, normal habitual behavior (embarrased by violating)
mores - beliefs re: rightness or wrongness of a behavior (punished by violating) - social distance scale
-
Bogardus.
how one feels toward other ethnic groups (racial, national, religious, linguistic, cultural) - culture vs. society
-
culture - defined by norms and values (found within a society)
society - self-perpetuating independent group who occupies a difinite territory - Ethnocentrism
-
view self as superior.
to use one's own culture as a yardstick to measure others. based on opinion
leads to patriotism, stability, pride - social exchange theory
- a relationship will endure if rewards > costs
- balance theory
-
(in social psychology). Festinger
cognitive dissonance theory
balanced cognitive state (replace inconsistency with consistency)
minimize dissonance - best predictors of retirement adjustment
-
financial security
health - therapeutic surrender
- the client psychologically surrenders himself to counselor of different culture... becomes open with feelings / thoughts
- connotation
-
emotional content of the word
"semantic differential" - emic
-
viewpoint
an anthropological term based on "emigration"
each client is an individual with individual differences
(vs. etic) - etic
-
viewpoint
humans are humans (treat each client the same, regardless of individual differences)
(vs. emic) - autoplastic
-
means of coping: change comes from within
(vs. alloplastic) - alloplastic
-
means of coping: change / alter external factors
(vs. autoplastic) - personalism
-
perception of client:
all people must adjust to environmental and geological demands
*see the client who has learned a set of survival skills rather than a diseased client - Stanley Milgram
- obedience / authority in social settings
- Osgood and Tannenbaum
-
Congruity Theory
attitudes that change the most are less extreme
strong beliefs... less likely to change attitude about
attitude = neutral... greater likelihood of change - Milton H. Erickson
-
brief psychotherapy
innovative techniques in hypnosis - Arnold Lazarus
-
behaviorist
BASIC-ID
multimodal treatment
known for initial work in systematic desensitization -
Piaget
stages: -
cognitive development
sensorimotor
preoperation (2-7y)
concrete operation (7-11y)
formal operation (12+) - conservation
-
concrete operation
the knowledge that a substance's weight, mass, and volume remain the same even if it changes shape - reversibility
-
concrete operation
one can undo an action - an object can return to its initial shape - egocentrism
-
preoperational stage
the child cannot view the world from the vantage point of someone else -
Lawrence Kohlberg
stages: -
moral development
preconventional (respond to consequences)
conventional (wants to meet standards of society, conform)
postconventional (self accepted morality, universal, ethical principles) - counterconditioning
-
behaviorist technique
goal: weaken or eliminate a learned response by pairing it with a stronger or desirable response - Harry Stack Sullivan
-
stage theorist
psychiatry of interpersonal relations - John Bowlby
-
bonding and attachment
(adaptive significance)
must bond <3 years, if severed "object loss" -> psychopathology - Harry Harlow
-
maternal deprivation and isolation in rhesus monkeys
attachment - innate tendency
(preferred terry cloth over wire mother) - stage theorists vs. developmentalists
-
stage - believe qualitative change between stages
developmental - continuous process, begins at conception, cephalocaudal - preconventional
-
Kohlberg (moral development)
Punishment / Obediance
Hedonism Orientation - conventional
-
Kohlberg (moral development)
Good Boy / Good Girl
Authority. Law. Order - post conventional
-
Kohlberg (moral development)
Accepted Law. Social Contract
Self Conscience. Universal ethics - Oedipus Complex
-
Freud
fantasy of sexual relations with opposite sex parent
phallic stage
leads to tension > wish to kill > identity with parent of same sex > values. conscious - Gibson
- researched depth perception using a cliff
- conceptualization of the unconscious mind
- Freud
- Eros vs. Thanatos
-
love of life
death - introjection
- incorporate others views as one's own
- denial
- conscious act of denying an item's existance
- displacement
- impulse unleashed at a safe target
- rationalization
- intellectual excuse to minimize hurt feelings
- compensation
- overdevelop a trait to make up for negative shortcomings
- repression
- truly forget - automatic, involuntary
- projection
- attribute unacceptible qualities of self to other
- reaction formation
- cannot accept impulse - acts in opposite manner
- identification
- identifies with cause - hope to be perceived in positive light
- successful resolution of Oedipus Complex
-
identification with aggressor (parent of same sex)
*leads to development of superego - unconscious mind
-
Freud.
information normally unknown or hidden from the client - preconscious mind
-
Freud.
capable of bringing ideas into awareness with minimal difficulty. can access conscious and unconscious minds - conscious mind
-
Freud.
aware of immediate environment - ego defense mechanisms
-
unconscious strategies to control tension, relieve anxiety.
distort reality
based on self-deception to protect self-image - psychosexual stages
-
Freud
oral, anal, phallic, latency, genital - operant conditioning
-
B.F.Skinner
instrumental learning - classical conditioning
-
Ivan Pavlov
"reflexes"
respondent behavior - free association
-
analytic technique
instructing the client to say what comes to mind - Anna O
-
patient of Joseph Breuer
suffered from symptoms without organic basis - hysteria
after hypnosis, could talk
-> catharsis (talking cure) -
interpretation
(purpose:) - make the client aware of unconscious process
- SUDS
-
Subjective units of distress scale
form hierarchy to perform Wolpe's systematic desensitization
a behavior therapy technique for curbing phobic reactions
created via the process of introspection - mandalas
-
Carl Jung
drawings balanced around a center point
self-unification (magic protective circle) - Eidetic imagery
-
ability to remember minute details for an extended period of time
"photographic memory"
gone by the time a child reaches adolescence - Carl Jung
-
analytic psychology
archetypes - inherited unconscious factors
personality factors->MBTI - learning (3 types)
-
reinforcement (operant conditioning)
association (classical conditioning)
insight - Alfred Adler
-
lifestyle is a predictable self-fulfilling prophecy based on our psychological feeling of ourself.
behavior must be studied in a social context
-lifestyle
-birth order
-family constellation
-organ inferiority (and the individual attempts to compensate)
-people wish to belong
-social connectedness - Eric Berne
-
Transactional Analysis (TA)
(cognitive approach, intellectual)
incorporates Gestalt Therapy
(experimental, affect) - Little Hans
-
psychoanalytic explanation of fear (explained using Oedipus Complex and castration anxiety)
(in opposition to Little Albert - behaviorist view) -
Neo-Freudians
stress social factors -
A.Adler
K.Horney
E.Erikson
H.Stack Sullivan
E.Fromm - Joseph Breuer
-
"talking cure"
work on hysteria - insight
-
process of making a client aware of something which was previously unknown
increase self-knowledge
(technically, the term comes from W.Kohler (Gestalt theorist)) -
Analytic movement
(theorists:) -
Freud
Jung
Adler - id
-
Freud.
pleasure principle
chaotic
instincts - ego
-
Freud.
reality
personality - superego
-
Freud.
conscience / morals
values
perfection
ideal - Joseph Wolpe
-
systematic desensitization
behaviorist technique
decreased reaction to anxious-producing stimuli (ameliorate phobic reactions)
based on counterconditioning - TAT
-
Henry Murray 1938
Thematic Apperception Test
projective test - Rudolph Dreikurs
-
student of Adler
first to discuss the use of group therapy in private practice
-> school setting -
intoversion
extroversion -
Jung
personality types of MBTI - unconditional positive regard
-
counselor accepts the client without stipulation
non-directive
client-centered
person-centered - confrontation
- illuminate discrepancies between clients and helpers view
- Behaviorists
-
do not believe in mental constructs...
feel if it cannot be measured, it does not exist
tend to emphasize the power of the environment
strive for system reduction
do not believe in symptom substitution
obtain baseline measures. - Frederick Thorne
- eclictic
- Rollo May
- existential counseling
- E.G.Williamson
-
MN Viewpoint
match client traits with career
"trait-factor" - B.F.Skinner
-
reinforcement theory
"responses accompanied by satisfaction are repeated"
instrumental learning - reinforcers
-
tend to increase the probability that a behavior will occur
(+)something is added after operent
(-)something is taken away - punishment
-
decreases the probability that a behavior will occur
effects are usually temporary
it teached aggression
does not cause one to unlearn the behavior -
stimulus generalization
stimulus discrimation -
second order conditioning
respond only to specific stimuli - extinction
-
ignoring a behavior... it will go away in time
(it will get worse before it gets better)
client is isolated from the reinforcement -
psychoanalysis...
(different than dynamic couseling) -
more sessions
utilizes the couch
not face to face - Daniel P. Schreber
-
"Memoirs of Mental Patient"
Freud's view: stuggle with homosexuality - factors negatively impacting social influence
-
competence
power
intimacy - counselor's social power or social influence is related to:
-
EAT:
Expertise
Attractiveness
Trustworthiness - triadic consultation
- consultant works with a mediator to provide services to a client
- process consultation
- focus is NOT on the content of the problem, but on the process used to solve the problem
- "doctor patient" model of consultation
-
Schein
consultation is paid to diagnose the problem and prescribe a solution
focus: agency, not individual - behavioral consultation
-
"social learning model"
consultant designs behavioral change models for the consultee to implement - Person-Centered
-
reflection vs. advice
*Conditions for Growth:
Empathy
Genuineness / Congruence
Unconditional (+) regard
-> self actualization - Carl Rogers
-
existential / humanistic
Person-Centered - retroflection
-
act of doing to self what you would like to do to others (Gestalt)
unfinished business
unexpressed emotions - Gestalt:
-
(word came from Wertheimer)
form, figure, or configuration unified as a whole
-here and now
-experience
-stay with the feeling
-"I" stattements
-psychodrama - role playing (experiment, exercise) - Carkhuff... Gazda
-
core dimensions (qualities) (+) therapeutic outcomes
[5 point scale]
empathy
genuineness
concreteness
respect - Fritz Perls
-
Gestalt Therapy
empty chair technique (individual can work on opposing feeling); underdog; topdog
use exaggeration - Donald Meichenbaum
-
cognitive restructuring
"Self Instructional Therapy"
stress inoculation techniques:
educational, rehearsal, and application phases - Aaron Beck
-
cognitive therapy
(differs from REBT)
dysfunctional ideas are too absolute and broad though not necessarily irrational - RBT
-
Maultsby (studied with A.Ellis)
Rational Behavior Therapy
written self analysis
didactic role = counselor -
systematic desensitization
(steps:) -
Joseph Wolpe
relaxation training
construction-anxiety hierarchy
desensitization in imagination
in vivo desensitization - therapeutic cognitive restructuring
-
(REBT)
irrational thinking - core of emotional disturbance
*cognitive dispution*
refuting irrational ideas and replacing them with rational ones -
REBT
ABC
DE -
Affecting event
Belief system
Consequence (emotional)
Disputing the irrational belief
Effective new philosophy - Epictetus
-
"people are disturbed not by things, but by the views they take of them"
REBT - Albert Ellis
-
REBT
assumes client's emotional disturbance is the result of irrational thoughts annd ideas -
Reality Theory
(client-counselor relationship) -
William Glasser
like a friend asking what is wrong
client and counselor be persistent and never give up
past... not a primary focus, successful behaviors
little use of diagnostic labels - William Glasser
-
Reality Theory
incorporates control theory (choice theory)
perception controls our behavior - rational emotive imagery
-
used by REBT
client imagines situations that has caused emotional disturbances, imagines change feeling using rational, logic, scientific thought - pioneers in behaviorism
-
Pavlov
Jones (Mary Carver)
Watson - E.Thorndike
-
"law of effect"
trial and error learning
assumes that (+) associations related to given behavior > "stamped in"
(-) > "stamped out" - Mary Carver Jones
- learning - could serve as treatment for phobic reaction
- Neal Miller
-
*biofeedback
first to demonstrate that animals could be conditioned to control autonomic processes - Skinner vs. Pavlov
-
operant conditioning (instrumental)
classical conditioning (respondent) - Yerkes-Dodson Law
- a moderate amount of arousal actually improves performance
- averse conditioning
- pair (behavior item) with aversive stimulus to decrease satisfaction
- existential vs. behaviorist
- focus on hear and now - what the person can become, philosophy of helping, abstract, non-systematic, vague re: technique and procedures, rejects traditional diagnosis and assessment
- Viktor Frakl
-
logotherapy - one has choices and cannot blame others or childhood for lack of fulfillment
existential philosophy
healing through meaning - paradoxical intention
-
advise client to purposely exaggerate a dysfunctional behavior in the imagination
(behaviorist) - covert sensitization
- "imagine"
- implosive therapy
-
T.G.Stampft
conducted in the imagination - flooding
-
in vivo
deliberate exposure to the feared stimuli with response prevention
(avoiding the fear > intensify it) - empathy vs. sympathy
-
the ability to experience another person's subjective experience / world and communicate that
compassion (it may imply pity) - Robert R. Carkhuff
-
scale for measurement of empathic understanding in interpersonal processes
1-5 - Parent
-
E.Berne
"ought / should"
composed of values internalized from significant others
Nurturing or Critical
(superego)
(exteropsyche) - Adult
-
E.Berne
processes facts not feelings
(ego)
(neopsyche) - Child
-
E.Berne
(id)
(archaeopsyche)
Natural, Little Professor, Adapted - existentialism
-
stress: growth and self-actualization
*self determination
counselor helps the client discover meaning in life by doing a deed or suffering
rejects analysis and behaviorism for being deterministic and reductionistic - Moreno
-
group therapy
around 1960 -
theorist...
preface to group therapy -
Adler
"man's problems and conflicts are recognized in their social nature" -
groups
(three levels) -
primary - preventive. attempt to ward of problems and minimize the occurrence of difficulty
secondary - problem is present. attempt to lessed the severity / length of the problem
tertiary - deals wth individual difficulties / longstanding - content vs. process
-
content - material discussed
process - the manner in which the discussion and transaction occur (analyzing communication, transaction, interaction) -
groups
(three types) -
guidance - primary group. structured. preventive
counseling - focus: conscious concerns
therapy - psychodynamic. tertiary group - structured vs. unstructured
-
(-) less effective, pass over group stages
(+) speed up interaction and focus - horizontal vs. vertical
-
approach the group as a whole (interpersonal)
approach individuals in the group (intrapersonal) - cohesiveness
- forces which bind group members together
- norms
- govern acceptible rules / behavior
- stages of group formation:
-
forming
storming
norming
performing
adjourning - difficulty index
- indicates the percent of individuals who answer each item correctly
-
test format:
normative -
can be compared to others taking the text
percentile rank - test format: ipsative
-
each item is independent of all other items
a client cannot be compared to others who have taken the test
(compares traits within the same individual) - achievement test
- measures maximum performance
-
personality test
inventory - measures typical performance
- spiral test
- items get progressively more difficult
- parallel form
-
two versions or forms are interchangeable
same mean and standard error - validity
-
measures what it says it measures
MOST IMPORTANT - reliability
- how consistent a test measures an attribute
- content validity
-
(rational, logical)
how well the test examines or samples the behavior - construct validity
- a test's ability to measure a theoretical construct (intelligence, self esteem, mechanical ability) *any trait you cannot "directly" measure or observe
- predictive validity
-
empirical validity
reflects the test's ability to predict future behavior according to established criteria - criterion validity
-
concurrent
predictive - synthetic validity
- researcher looks for tests that have been shown to predict each job element
- incremental validity
-
describes the process by which a test is refined and becomes more valid as contradictory items are dropped.
refers to test's ability to improve predictors (gives information that other tests do not) - face validity
- refers to the extent that a test looks or appears to measure the intended attribute
- concurrent validity
- how well the test compares to other instruments that measure the same behavior, construct, trait
- convergent validity
- a method used to assess a test's construct / criterion validity by correlating test scores with an outside source
- discriminant validity
- the test will not reflect unrelated variables
- a RELIABLE test is not always VALID
- a VALID test is always RELIABLE
- test-retest reliability
-
give same test to same group 2 times, then correlate the scores (OK for items that remain stable: IQ; not for MOOD or MEMORY)
tests for stability - equivalent / alternate form reliability
-
give the same population alternate forms of identical test
parallel forms
must have counterbalancing - split half method
- individual takes the entire test as a whole, then divided in half
- inter-rater / inter-observer reliability
- utilized with subjective tests to ascertain whether the scoring criteria are such that 2 persons -> roughly the same score
- reliability coefficient
-
1=perfect score - no error.
only with physicial measures
.9=excellent psychological test
.8=acceptable level of variance
(20% can be accounted for by error) - true variance
-
percentage of shared variance - the level of the same thing measured by both tests
*square the correlation "coefficient of determination" - Frances Galton
-
concluded that intelligence is normally distributed like height and weight
primarily genetic - Charles Spearman
-
felt intelligence was best explained via a 2 factor theory
G=general ability
S=specific ability - J.P.Fuilford
-
isolated 120 factors > intelligence
convergent - taking a number of thoughts and coming up with a single idea
divergent - coming up with a novel idea - Kudar Richardson coefficient of equivalence
-
internal consistency reliability
inter item consistency
also: Cronbach's alpha coeffieient - IQ
-
Intelligent Quotient
MA x 100%
CA
SAS - standard age score
mean = 100
SD = 15 -
WPPSI-R
WAIS-III
WISC-III -
3-7y
adults
6-16y - Wechsler IQ
-
WAIS-III
individual test
"performance" and "verbal" skills
mean = 100
SD = 16 - John Entl
- claimed he invented an electronic machine to analyze neural efficiency to take the place of paper/pencil IQ tests
- Raymond B.Cattell
-
fluid - inherited neurological intelligence, declines with age, not dependent on culture
crystallized intelligence - from experience, culture, education - Arthur Jensen
-
Black vs. White controversy
1969
whites scored 10-15 points higher on IQ - psychometric
- any form of mental testing
- 16 PF
-
Raymond B.Cattell
16 personality factor questionnaire -
MBTI
reflects work of: - Carl Jung
- one who favors projective measures:
-
psychodynamic clinician
relies on unconscious mind - aptitude vs. achievement
-
measures potential (predictive validity)
measures what has been learned -
school selection tests.
aptitude or achievement -
aptitude
aptitude - achievement - standard error of measurement
-
how accurate or inaccurate a test score is
low standard error = high reliability - threats to internal validity
-
maturation of subjects
mortality
instruments used
statistical regression - causal comparative design
-
true experiment EXCEPT
groups were not randomly assigned...
can use parametric statistical tests