Asked by angiala guilmette on Apr 23, 2024

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"A measure of how stable a test is over time" is an example of which of the following types of reliability?

A) interrater
B) test-retest
C) parallel forms
D) internal consistency

Test-Retest

A method used to assess the consistency of a measure by comparing the scores of the same participants on the same test administered at two different times.

Parallel Forms

A method of reliability assessment in psychometrics where two different versions of a test are used to measure the same construct, to check for consistency.

Interrater

Relates to the degree of agreement among independent observers or raters evaluating the same phenomenon.

  • Interpret the relationship between test-retest reliability and temporal stability of measures.
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Verified Answer

BA
Brandon Abulebdeh6 days ago
Final Answer :
B
Explanation :
A measure of how stable a test is over time refers to test-retest reliability, which assesses the consistency of results obtained from the same test on two different occasions. Interrater reliability refers to the degree of agreement among different raters, parallel forms reliability involves administering two different but equivalent versions of a test, and internal consistency reliability is the degree to which different items on a test measure the same construct.