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TEST BANK FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING PRINCIPLES, APPLICATIONS, AND ISSUES, 9TH EDITION, ROBERT M. KAPLAN, DENNIS P. SACCUZZO ALL CHAPTERS 1-21

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PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING: PRINCIPLES, APPLICATIONS, AND ISSUES, Ninth Edition explains the fundamentals of psychological testing, their important applications, and the controversies that emerge from those applications in clinical, education, industrial, and legal settings. Kaplan and Saccuzzo's engaging and thorough text demonstrates how psychological tests are constructed and used, both in a professional setting and in everyday lives. Part I focuses on the core concepts that affect the evaluation of all tests. Part II discusses the major types of psychological tests, while Part III looks at present-day issues affecting testing such as stereotype threat, bias, laws, and ethics. A multitude of test profiles and sample items illustrate how psychological testing is used and reported. Real-life case studies demonstrate the uses and misuses of psychological testing, while "Technical Example" boxes help you understand complex statistical concepts.

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Uploaded on
November 19, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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Test Bank for Psychological Testing Principles, Applications,
And Issues, 9th Edition, Robert M. Kaplan, Dennis P. Saccuzzo
All 21 Chapters

,Table of Content
Chapter 1. Introduction

Chapter 2. Norms and Basic Statistics for Testing

Chapter 3. Correlation and Regression

Chapter 4. Reliability

History and Theory of Reliability

Chapter 5. Validity

Defining Validity

Chapter 6. Writing and Evaluating Test Items

Chapter 7. Test Administration

Chapter 8. Interviewing Techniques

Chapter 9. Theories of Intelligence and the Binet Scales

Chapter 10. The Wechsler Intelligence Scales: WAIS-IV, WISC-V, and WPPSI-IV

Chapter 11. Tests for Infants, Disabilities, and Special Populations

Chapter 12. Standardized Tests in Education, Civil Service, and the Military

Chapter 13. Applications in Clinical and Counseling Settings

Chapter 14. Projective Personality Tests

Chapter 15. Computers and Basic Psychological Science in Testing

Chapter 16. Testing in Counseling Psychology

Chapter 17. Testing in Health Psychology and Health Care

Chapter 18. Testing in Industrial and Business Settings

Chapter 19. Test Bias

Chapter 20. Testing and the Law

Chapter 21. The Future of Psychological Testing

,MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. According to a study (Espenshade & Chung, 2010;
Jaschik, 2006), growing numbers of four-year colleges
are not relyingon the SAT test partly because of
a. budget constraints.
b. diversity concerns.
c. reliability issues.
d. quality control.


ANS: B PTS: 1 REF: Introduction

2. Psychological tests
a. pertain only to overt behavior.
b. always have right or wrong answers.
c. do not attempt to measure traits.
d. measure characteristics of human behavior.


ANS: D PTS: 1 REF: Basic
ConceptsMSC: www

3. The specific stimulus on a test to which a person
respondsovertly is called a(n)
a. overt event.
b. answer.
c. item.
d. scale.

, ANS: C PTS: 1 REF: Basic Concepts

4. An individual test
a. involves a single examiner for two or more subjects.
b. involves only tests of human ability.
c. can only be given to one person at a time.
d. involves more than one examiner for a single
subject.


ANS: C PTS: 1 REF: Basic Concepts

5. A group test
a. can be given to multiple people by one examiner.
b. can only be given to three people at a time.
c. involves a group of examiners for a single subject.
d. involves only tests of human ability.


ANS: A PTS: 1 REF: Basic Concepts

6. Previous learning can best be described as
a. achievement.
b. aptitude.
c. intelligence.
d. ability.


ANS: A PTS: 1 REF: Basic
ConceptsMSC: www

7. The potential for learning a specific skill can best be
described
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