Levels of Measurement
Central Tendency & Variability
Correlation
Reliability
Validity
100

What are the four levels of measurement?

Nominal, Ordinal, Interval, Ratio

100

Name the three measures of central tendency.

Mean, Median, Mode

100

What does a correlation coefficient (r) tell us?

The strength and direction of a relationship between two variables.

100

Define reliability.

The consistency of a measurement.

100

Define validity.

The accuracy of a test in measuring what it claims to measure.

200

What type of variable is “gender”?

Nominal

200

Which measure is most affected by outliers?

Mean

200

What is the range of possible correlation values?

From -1.00 to +1.00

200

A stress test given twice, one month apart, checks what type of reliability?

Test-Retest Reliability

200

A nursing exam missing key skills lacks what type of validity?

Content Validity

300

What level of measurement is used for ranking satisfaction (1st, 2nd, 3rd)?

Ordinal

300

The mean and median differ greatly. What does this suggest?

The data may be skewed or have outliers.

300

What is the difference between correlation and causation?

Correlation shows a relationship; causation means one variable directly affects another.

300

Two raters give nearly identical scores. What type of reliability?

Interrater Reliability

300

A new cholesterol test matches results from a gold-standard lab test. What type?

Criterion (Concurrent) Validity

400

What makes ratio data different from interval data?

Ratio has a true zero (e.g., weight, age).

400

What are the three main measures of variability?

Range, Variance, Standard Deviation

400

If r = -0.85, describe the strength and direction.

Strong negative correlation

400

Items on a scale measuring the same construct are highly correlated. What type?

Internal Consistency

400

A depression scale correlates with clinical symptoms. What type?

Construct Validity

500

A dataset includes income levels ($20K, $40K, $60K, etc.) but has one extreme outlier ($2 million). Which measure of central tendency should the researcher use and why?

Median, because it’s less affected by outliers and gives a more accurate center for skewed data.

500

If s = 0, what does that mean about the data?

There is no variability. All scores are identical.

500

If r = 0.7, what is r²? What does it mean?

r² = 0.49, meaning 49% of variance in one variable is explained by the other.

500

Name one way to improve reliability.

Provide clear instructions, eliminate ambiguous items, or increase number of items.

500

What is the relationship between reliability and validity?

A test can be reliable but not valid, but it must be reliable to be valid.