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ASSESSMENT OF DISADVANTAGED ADOLESCENTS: A DIFFERENT APPROACH TO RESEARCH AND EVALUATION MEASURES 1
Author(s) -
Freeberg Norman E.
Publication year - 1969
Publication title -
ets research bulletin series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2333-8504
pISSN - 0424-6144
DOI - 10.1002/j.2333-8504.1969.tb00580.x
Subject(s) - disadvantaged , psychology , construct (python library) , internal consistency , construct validity , poverty , consistency (knowledge bases) , clinical psychology , test (biology) , cognition , variety (cybernetics) , developmental psychology , applied psychology , psychometrics , psychiatry , computer science , paleontology , artificial intelligence , political science , law , economics , biology , programming language , economic growth
The suitability of available formal tests for individuals from culturally deprived, poverty‐level backgrounds has long been open to criticism by test specialists. The present study is an attempt to overcome a number of the claimed defects for a variety of cognitive and noncognitive measures by (1) “Tailoring” a battery of measures specifically to disadvantaged adolescent groups and (2) demonstrating their value based upon their psychometric characteristics and the logic of various research‐related findings. A battery of 13 measures was administered to 256 male and female high school dropouts enrolled in a federally funded youth‐work training program. Item characteristics, levels of internal consistency, external validity based upon rating criteria, construct validity based upon factor analysis and the logic of a number of research findings with the individual measures–all present a pattern of results reasonable enough to warrant continued research application and development of these types of measures for appraisal of disadvantaged adolescents.

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