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EPPP Assessment Questions and Answers.

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EPPP Assessment Questions and Answers.

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  • April 23, 2024
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EPPP Assessment Questions and
Answers.
Psychological Assessment -
\-Process of using psychological tests, clinical interviews, behavioral observations, and
other assessment tools to gather data on an individual's cognitive, social, and
behavioral functioning for the purpose of description, classification, prediction, and
intervention

Examiner Qualifications -
\-Level A: may be administered and interpreted by a non-psychologist
-Level B: require some technical knowledge of test construction and use, as well as
completion of supporting educational and psychological subjects
-Level C: should be administered only by individuals with at least an MA in psychology
and at least one year of supervised experience under a psychologist

Reliability vs Validity -
\-Reliability: degree to which test scores are free from the effects of measurement error
Validity: degree to which a test measures what it was designed to measure

Standardization -
\-The examinee's responses, the apparatus, and the scoring have been fixed so the
scores collected at different times and places are fully comparable; any deviations from
standardized administration and scoring may result in invalid conclusions
-The test has been administered under standard conditions to a representative sample
for the purpose of establishing norms; the greater the discrepancy between the
examinee and the norm group, the less likely the test results will be valid

Types of Scoring -
\-Norm-Referenced: comparison between an examinee's scores and the scores of the
norm group; percentile ranks, standard scores
-Criterion-Referenced: domain or content referenced; scores based on what the
examinee can do or knows with regard to clearly defined content; percent correct
-Self-Referenced: ipsative; intra-individual comparison of scores; relative strengths or
weaknesses

Behavioral Assessment -
\-Focuses on overt and covert behaviors that occur in specific circumstances
-May utilize behavioral interviews, observation, cognitive assessment, or
psychophysiological measures
-Functional behavioral assessment (FBA): determines the purpose of a behavior by
identifying antecedents and consequences

,Dynamic Assessment -
\-Interactive approach and deliberate deviation from standardized procedures to obtain
additional information about the examinee
-Associated with educational assessment
-Testing the limits: involves providing examinees with additional cues, suggestions, or
feedback; ordinarily done after standardized administration
-Graduated prompting: giving the examinee a series of verbal prompts that are
graduated in terms of difficulty level
-Test-teach-retest: following the initial assessment with an intervention designed to
modify the examinee's performance, then re-assessing

Computer-Assisted Assessment -
\-Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT): computer tailors the test to an individual examinee
by choosing subsequent items based on previous answers
-Increases precision and efficacy, as all examinees are tested with the same degree of
reliability and reduced testing time
-Computer-based interpretations should not be used to replaced clinical judgement

Actuarial vs Clinical Predictions -
\-Actuarial: statistical; based on empirically validated relationship between test results
and specific criteria
-Clinical: based on the decision-maker's intuition, experience, and knowledge; clinical
judgement
-Research has found that actuarial method alone is more accurate than clinical
judgement alone

Assessing Children -
\-Interviews can be used to obtain reliable and valid data from children as young as 6
-Goals include establishing rapport and maintaining the child's cooperation, and can be
accomplished by using descriptive statements, reflections, and open-ended questions;
providing labeled praise; and avoiding critical statements and leading questions

Assessing Members of Culturally Diverse Populations -
\-Considerations include acculturation, identity, language proficiency, availability of
appropriate norms, cultural equivalence of content measured by the test, and availability
of more culturally appropriate alternatives
-There are no truly culture-fair or culture-free tests
-Research has found no consistent effect of match or mismatch between examiner and
examinee in terms of race, ethnicity, or culture

Self-Report -
\-One of the most common data collection methods
-Advantages include quick production and scoring, and low cost
-Disadvantages can include weaker reliability and validity

Multi-Informant Report -

, \-Advantages include increased information about the client
-Disadvantages can include inconsistency in reports across various informants

Psychophysiological Measures -
\-Used to observe physiological functions which can often describe the emotional state
of an individual
-Advantages include ability to analyze momentary experiences without intervening in
the interaction while it occurs
-Disadvantages can include monetary expense and that not every momentary
experience may be important

Direct Observation -
\-Observational study; method of collecting evaluative information in which the evaluator
watches the participant in their usual environment to evaluate ongoing behavior
processes; can be overt or covert
-Structured: most appropriate when standardized information needs to be gathered and
results in quantitative data
-Unstructured: provides qualitative data
-Disadvantages can include participant and observer bias

Structured vs Unstructured Interview -
\-Structured: fixed set of close questions; easier to replicate and test for reliability; not as
flexible and answers may lack detail
-Unstructured: more flexible; questions can be adapted as needed; generate a lot of
qualitative data; time consuming; interviewers need more training

Spearman's Two-Factor Theory of Intelligence -
\-Proposed a general intellectual factor (g)
-Argued that performance on any cognitive task depends on g plus one or more specific
factors (s) unique to the task

Horn and Cattell's Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence -
\Crystallized (Gc): acquired knowledge and skills; affected by educational and cultural
experiences; includes reading, numerical skill, and factual knowledge
Fluid (Gf): enables individuals to solve novel problems and perceive relations and
similarities; does not depend on specific instruction; relatively culture-free
-Crystalized intelligence increases until ~age 60, while fluid intelligence peaks in late
adolescence and then declines (related to declines in working memory and processing
speed)

Carroll's Three-Stratum Theory of Intelligence -
\-Stratum III: generalized intelligence (g)
-Stratum II: 8 broad abilities including fluid intelligence, crystallized intelligence, general
memory and learning
-Stratum I: specific abilities each linked to one of the second stratum abilities

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