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Psychological Testing: History, Principles, and Applications

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Establishes a solid foundation of knowledge about psychological testing

 

Psychological testing impacts virtually every corner of modern life, from education to vocation to remediation. Psychological Testing: History, Principles, and Applications, 7/e, covers all variations of testing and explores social issues testing raises. This program provides readers extensive knowledge about the characteristics, objectives, and wide-ranging effects of psychological testing.

720 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2013

25 people are currently reading
267 people want to read

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5 stars
27 (28%)
4 stars
30 (31%)
3 stars
23 (23%)
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6 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for mansi.
38 reviews7 followers
May 18, 2024
A perfect complement to Anastasi's book, and provides updates and contemporary literature on current state of psychological testing
1 review1 follower
Read
March 14, 2013
the best book for Psychologist
1 review
December 3, 2017
If I could give this book no stars, I would. After reading this book for a college course, it honestly seems like it was originally written in a different language, and then copied and pasted into Google Translate. There is colloquial language mixed with formal terminology. It is not user friendly; there are no chapter summaries, and very few visuals. The topics are also very poorly organized, and don't flow well. In my opinion, this textbook promotes frustration instead of learning.
Profile Image for Görkem Saylam.
37 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2024
Psychological Testing: History, Principles, and Applications (7e) | Robert J. Gregory
Scoring Rubric
1: baseline
2: creative contextualization bcs of covering almost all principles and applications in psychological testing
1: routine conceptualization bcs of no new holistic comprehension on psychological testing
4: total points by 5
Profile Image for Carly.
862 reviews11 followers
October 31, 2009
Oh my.

This book was a BEAST to read. The only reason it is receiving 2, and not 1 star is that the last chapters were actually somewhat interesting, discussing the legal ramifications of testing (including a blurb about how the Texas Education Agency was sued in 2000 over the TAAS. Lucky residents of Texas now have the new and improved TAKS--note the sarcasm).

I also, despite my hatred of this book, liked the discussion of career, interest and personality tests. (All 1.5 chapters devoted to it.) Since I believe these to be the tests that I will actually find myself using as a school counselor.

I now have a research-based hardened look at all the standardized tests I have ever taken or administered. My conclusion: tests suck.

1 review1 follower
Currently reading
August 16, 2011
good book
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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