Despite increases in their application and improvements in their structure, there is a paucity of reliable and valid scales compared to the complex range of problems that social workers and other health professionals confront daily. They need to be able to design rapid assessment instruments (RAIs)
Developing and Validating Rapid Assessment Instruments (Pocket Guides to Social Work Research Methods)
โ Scribed by Neil Abell, David W. Springer, Akihito Kamata
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 233
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Despite increases in their application and improvements in their structure, there is a paucity of reliable and valid scales compared to the complex range of problems that social workers and other health professionals confront daily. They need to be able to design rapid assessment instruments (RAIs) to fit their specific situations, and with this step-by-step guide by RAI experts, that prospect will be much less intimidating. For each stage of RAI development, from conceptualization through design, data collection, and analysis, the authors identify critical concerns, ground them in the growing conceptual and empirical psychometric literature, and offer practical advice. A presentation of the basics of construct conceptualization and the search for evidence of validity is complemented by introductions to concept mapping and cross-cultural translation, as well as an in-depth discussion of cutting-edge topics like bias and invariance in item responses. In addition, they critique and illustrate factor analysis in exploratory and confirmatory strategies, offering guidance for anticipating elements of a complete data collection instrument, determining sampling frame and size, and interpreting resulting coefficients. This pocket guide provides a comprehensive start-to-finish overview of the basics of scale development, giving practical guidance that practitioners at all levels will be able to put to use.
โฆ Table of Contents
Contents......Page 10
1 Introduction and Overview......Page 14
2 Instrument Design......Page 26
3 Study Design......Page 64
4 Reliability......Page 90
5 Establishing Evidence of Scale Score Validity......Page 109
6 Factor Analysis......Page 142
7 Integration and Enhancement of Psychometric Evidence......Page 193
Appendix......Page 214
References......Page 218
C......Page 228
E......Page 229
L......Page 230
R......Page 231
S......Page 232
V......Page 233
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