CHAPTER 1 Psychological Testing and AssessmentCHAPTER 2 Historical, Cultural, and Legal/Ethical ConsiderationsCHAPTER 3 A Statistics RefresherCHAPTER 4 Of Tests and TestingCHAPTER 5 ReliabilityCHAPTER 6 ValidityCHAPTER 7 UtilityCHAPTER 8 Test DevelopmentCHAPTER 9 Intelligence and Its MeasurementCHAPTER 10 Tests of IntelligenceCHAPTER 11 Assessment for EducationCHAPTER 12 Personality Assessment: An OverviewCHAPTER 13 Personality Assessment MethodsCHAPTER 14 Clinical and Counseling AssessmentCHAPTER 15 Neuropsychological AssessmentCHAPTER 16 Assessment, Careers, and BusinessReferencesCreditsName IndexGlossary/Index
Ronald Jay Cohen, Ph.D., ABPP, is a Diplomate of the American Board
of Professional Psychology in Clinical Psychology, and a Diplomate
of the American Board of Assessment Psychology (ABAP). He is a New
York State licensed psychologist, and a scientist-practitioner and
scholar-professional in the finest traditions of each of those
terms. During a long and gratifying professional career in which he
has published numerous journal articles and books, Dr. Cohen has
had the privilege of personally working alongside some of the
luminaries in the field of psychological assessment,including David
Wechsler (while Cohen was a clinical psychology intern at Bellevue
Psychiatric Hospital in New York City) and Doug Bray (while working
as an assessor for AT&T in its Management Progress Study).
After serving his clinical psychology internship at Bellevue, Dr.
Cohen was appointed Senior Psychologist there, and his clinical
duties entailed not only psychological assessment but the
supervision and training of others in this enterprise.
Subsequently, as an independent practitioner in the New York City
area, Dr. Cohen taught various courses at local universities on an
adjunct basis, including undergraduate and graduate courses in
psychological assessment.Asked by a colleague to conduct a
qualitative research study for an advertising agency,Dr. Cohen
would quickly become a sought-after qualitative research consultant
with a client list of major companies and organizationsamong them
Paramount Pictures,Columbia Pictures, NBC Television, the Campbell
Soup Company, Educational Testing Service, and the College Board.
Dr. Cohens approach to qualitative research, referred to by him as
dimensional qualitative research, has been emulated and written
about by qualitative researchers around the world. Working as a
consultant to one major company that wanted to learn more about its
corporate culture, Dr. Cohen developed the Discussion of
Organizational Culture (a qualitative research instrument discussed
in Chapter 16). It was Dr. Cohens work in the area of qualitative
assessment that led him to found the scholarly journal Psychology &
Marketing, which in 2012 celebrated some 30 years of consecutive
publishing with Dr. Cohen as editor-in-chief.
Mark E. Swerdlik, Ph.D., ABPP, is Professor of Psychology at
Illinois State University,where he has taught the undergraduate
psychological measurement course, conducted professional seminars
addressing legal/ethical issues in assessment, and supervised
practicum students in assessment. He has served as an editorial
board member of several journals, written test reviews for several
journals, reviewed test-scoring software for a major test
publisher, and served as a reviewer for the Mental Measurements
Yearbook.In various professional capacities, he has participated in
the standardization of many psychological tests, including, for
example, the WISC-R, the WISC-III, the Kaufman Assessment Battery
for Children (K-ABC), the Stanford-Binet IV, the Peabody Picture
Vocabulary Test (PPVT), the Kaufman Test of Educational
Achievement, the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale, the
Psychological Processing Checklist (PPC), and the Psychological
Processing Checklist-Revised (PPC-R). As a licensed clinical
psychologist,a nationally certified school psychologist,
independent practitioner, and consultant,Dr. Swerdlik administers
and interprets psychological tests, and conducts seminars to train
fellow professionals in proper test administration, scoring, and
interpretation procedures. He has also served as a program
evaluator for many programs, a partial listing of which would
include the Heart of Illinois Low Incidence Association (HILA),the
Autism/Pervasive Developmental Delays Training and Technical
Assistance Project, and the Illinois National Guard Statewide
Reintegration Program for Combat Veterans(for veterans who served
in Iraq and Afghanistan, from 2006 to the present).
New to this edition is Edward Sturman, Ph.D., an Associate
Professor of Psychology at the State University of New York,
Plattsburgh. Dr. Sturman is the co-coordinator of the Psychology
program at the Queensbury branch campus, where he has taught many
courses, including a seminar in Psychological Assessment. Dr.
Sturman has developed several psychological tests, including the
Mood Disorders Insight Scale (MDIS) and the Involuntary
Subordination Questionnaire (ISQ), which have been linked to the
course and outcome of mood disorders. He has also conducted
research into the assessment of competency and developed a new
method to evaluate the reliability of tests. His research findings
have been published in well-regarded psychological journals and
presented at major psychological conferences. Prior to his current
teaching position, Dr. Sturman worked at the Self-Management Group
as a consultant investigating the link between personality and
performance in competitive environments, including sales and
management positions at large corporations. His current research is
primarily focused on the vulnerability of various personality
styles to mental disorder as well as the evolutionary underpinnings
of mental disorder.Dr. Sturman thanks his students, and in
particular, Michelle Mann-Saumier, KylieMcKeighan, Joyalina David,
Jeff Merrigan, and Jennifer Burch Dean for their work on his
contribution to this book.
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