How accurately a research study measures what it intends to measure using numerical data and ensures the results are reliable, consistent, and based on appropriate statistical methods.
What is Quantitative Validity?
This is a prominent factor to measure reliability.
What is stability?
This checks whether a test or measurement correlates well with an existing, established test measuring the same thing at the same time.
What is Concurrent Validity?
Refers to the trustworthiness and credibility of findings in a study based on non-numerical data and ensures the interpretations are accurate and represent the true experiences of the participants.
What is Qualitative Validity?
How far the reader can understand and is informed of the processes by which the interpretation made is actually reached.
What is transparency?
This measures how well a test predicts outcomes or behaviors in the future.
What is Predictive Validity?
Concurrent, consequential, cross-cultural, internal, and interpretive are some examples of this.
What is Qualitative Validity?
A measure to check the reliability of a test or survey by seeing how well the questions hold together as a group and helps determine if the items are reliable and produce consistent results.
What is Cronbach's Alpha?
This checks if a test truly measures the abstract concept or "construct" it’s supposed to measure.
What is Construct Validity?
This refers to the issue of whether an indicator that is devised to gauge a concept really measures the concept.
What is validity?
Test-Retest, Inter-Observer Internal Consistency are ways to obtain this.
What is Reliability.
This checks if a test correlates well with other tests or measures that assess the same or similar constructs.
What is Convergent Validity?
This is a principle of quantitative validity.
What is controllability?
The consistency of a measure of a concept.
What is reliability?
The measure reflects the content of the concept in question. For example, asking experienced people in the field to be judges.
What is Face Validity?