Psychological Testing
Psychological Testing
PSYCHOLOGICAL TEST are the important technique in selecting personnel, and this is widespread at all
levels and periods of life.
PSYCHOLOGICAL TEST is a measuring device, a yardstick applied in consistent and systematic fashion to measure
a sample of behavior.
PURPOSES OF PSYCHOLOGICAL TEST
1. SELECTION, the emphasis is on finding a person with the right qualifications for a particular job.
2. PLACEMENT, the emphasis is on the individual. The problem is to find the right kind of job for a particular
person.
1. STANDARDIZATION refers to the consistency or uniformity of the conditions and procedures for
administering a test.
2. OBJECTIVITY, as a characteristic of psychological tests, refers primarily to the scoring of the test is liable
to misinterpretation because of scorers attitude, prejudices, or momentary mood.
3. NORMS refers specifically to the average or typical performance on the test: this does not imply a level of
normal or desirable behavior as we might use the term in everyday conversation.
4. RELIABILITY refers to the consistency of response on a test. There are several methods for determining
reliability:
a. TEST RETEST METHOD involves administering a test twice to the same group of people and
correlating the two sets of scores. The closer the correlation coefficient (called the reliability
coefficient in this case) approaches a perfect positive correlation (+1.00), the more reliable is the
test.
b. EQUIVALENT-FORMS METHOD uses a test-retest approach. Instead of taking the same test a
second time, a similar form of the test is given, and the two sets of scores are correlated.
c. SPLIT-HALVES METHOD. The test is taken once, divided in half, and the two sets of items are
correlated with each other.
5. VALIDITY one of the most important requirements of any psychological test is that it measures accurately
what it is intended to measure.
1. INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP TEST. Individual test, administered to one person at a time, are more costly
and therefore, are used to lesser degree in industry than a group test.
2. SPEED AND POWER TEST
SPEED TEST has a fixed time limit at which point everyone taking the test must stop.
POWER TEST has no time limit, examines are allowed as much time as they feel they need to finish the test.
3. PAPER-AND-PENCIL AND PERFORMANCE TEST
PAPER-AND-PENCIL TESTS are the kind of test wherein questions are in printed form and the answers are
recorded on an answer sheet.
PERFORMANCE TESTS may take longer to administer than paper-and-pencil tests and also may require an
individual testing operation.
1. COGNITIVE ABILITY (better known as intelligence tests) are used in individual selection. Intelligence test
items relate mostly to educational material such as spelling, reading, or mathematics.
2. INTERESTS
Interest inventories are of greater value in vocational guidance and counseling than in industrial personnel
selection.
3. APTITUDES
APTITUDE TESTS must be created especially to measure the skills required by that job, but there are
published tests that measure general aptitudes for mechanical and clerical skills.
4. MOTOR ABILITY. Many jobs in industry and the military require a high degree of motor skill involving
muscular coordination, finger dexterity, or precise eye hand coordination.
The MacQuarrie Test for mechanical ability is one of the few tests of motor ability in paper-and-pencil form. The seven
subsets include:
1. TRACING- a line is drawn through very small openings in a number of vertical lines.
2. TAPPING- dots are made on paper as quickly as possible.
3. DOTTING- dots are made in circles as quickly as possible.
4. COPYING-simple designs are copied.
5. LOCATION- specific points must be located in smaller size version of a stimulus figure.
6. BLOCKS- the number of blocks in a drawing must be determined.
7. PURSUIT- the visual tracing of assorted lines in a maze.
7. PROJECTIVE TECHNIQUES
PROJECTIVE TESTS of personality were developed primarily for use in clinical psychology for work with
emotionally distributed individuals.