Validity of psychological assessment: Validation of inferences from persons' responses and performances as scientific inquiry into score meaning.

S Messick�- American psychologist, 1995 - psycnet.apa.org
S Messick
American psychologist, 1995psycnet.apa.org
The traditional conception of validity divides it into three separate and substitutable types:
content, criterion, and construct validities. This view is fragmented and incomplete,
especially because it fails to take into account both evidence of the value implications of
score meaning as a basis for action and the social consequences of score use. The new
unified concept of validity interrelates these issues as fundamental aspects of a more
comprehensive theory of construct validity that addresses both score meaning and social�…
Abstract
The traditional conception of validity divides it into three separate and substitutable types: content, criterion, and construct validities. This view is fragmented and incomplete, especially because it fails to take into account both evidence of the value implications of score meaning as a basis for action and the social consequences of score use. The new unified concept of validity interrelates these issues as fundamental aspects of a more comprehensive theory of construct validity that addresses both score meaning and social values in test interpretation and test use. That is, unified validity integrates considerations of content, criteria, and consequences into a construct framework for the empirical testing of rational hypotheses about score meaning and theoretically relevant relationships, including those of an applied and a scientific nature. Six distinguishable aspects of construct validity are highlighted as a means of addressing central issues implicit in the notion of validity as a unified concept. These are content, substantive, structural, generalizability, external, and consequential aspects of construct validity. In effect, these six aspects function as general validity criteria or standards for all educational and psychological measurement, including performance assessments, which are discussed in some detail because of their increasing emphasis in educational and employment settings.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association