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Education and Urban Society | 1 |
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Green, Donald Ross | 4 |
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Green, Donald Ross – Education and Urban Society, 1975
States that to demonstrate that a test is not biased for any given use, it is sufficient to show that it is equally valid for different groups. Although an examination of criterion-related validity can indicate bias, it is not ordinarily sufficient to indicate lack of bias, for which explorations of its construct validity regardless of use are…
Descriptors: Evaluation Criteria, Placement, Predictive Validity, Program Descriptions
Green, Donald Ross – 1982
Improved communication and cooperation between test publishers and school systems is essential for solving major test problems. Test-curriculum matching, test equating, and inappropriate use of grade equivalent scores are major problem areas. The degree to which a standardized test yields information relevant to what the system is trying to teach…
Descriptors: Equated Scores, Grade Equivalent Scores, School Districts, Standardized Tests
Green, Donald Ross – 1975
Biased tests systematically favor some groups over others as a result of factors not part of what the test is said to measure. Bias is basically a problem of differential validity. Validity can be discussed in terms of either the procedures for establishing it or test use. Both ways clarify bias in any test. For content and construct validity, the…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Groups, Individual Differences, Placement
Green, Donald Ross – 1971
This paper is concerned with the accusations made by such groups as the Association of Black Psychologists in their call for a moratorium on testing, that standardized tests are biased. A biased test measures one trait in one group of people but a different trait in a second group. Evidence about the amount of bias in tests is thin. Bias must be…
Descriptors: Blacks, Educationally Disadvantaged, Minority Groups, Predictive Measurement