National Institute for Urban School Improvement
--- Browse
--- search
--- my collection
--- contribute
--- help

NICI Virtual Library
www.thinkclick.org
Journals and More!
Library Close Window

NCCRESt

part of the Education Reform Networks

You are in: Subject —>

Test Validity

  • Development and Initial Score Validation of the Teacher Multicultural Attitude Survey
    Two coordinated studies involving 429 teachers and preservice teachers and 227 education graduate students were designed to develop and validate scores on an efficient self-report measure of multicultural awareness for teachers working in kindergarten through grade 12. The construct and criterion validity and reliability of the developed Teacher Multicultural Attitude Survey are supported.
  • Help or Hindrance? Staff Perspectives on Developmental Assessment in Multicultural Early Childhood Settings
    Thirty-five staff members' views on developmental assessment in a multicultural early childhood setting are described and used to initiate a critique of current practice in assessment of young children. Staff expressed a range of opinions from endorsement to frank rejection of the utility, validity, and ethics of developmental assessment.
  • Reliability and Validity of Three Measures of Multicultural Competency
    Examines the reliability and validity of three measures of multicultural competency, the Multicultural Counseling Awareness Scale: Form B (MCAS), the Multicultural Awareness-Knowledge-and Skills Survey (MAKSS), and the Survey of Graduate Students' Experiences with Diversity (GSEDS). The findings generally support the psychometric soundness of these surveys, with some important exceptions.
  • Validity of an Observation Screening Instrument in a Multicultural Population
    This study found that the Davis Observation Checklist for Texas, an observational teacher checklist for screening preschool children for communication disorders, demonstrated adequate sensitivity and specificity. The concurrent validity of the checklist was assessed with 59 multicultural children (ages 4 through 5), including Mexican Americans, African Americans, and Anglos.