Login
Remember
Register
Science Q&A Sarvan.Net
All Activity
Q&A
Questions
Hot!
Unanswered
Tags
Categories
Users
Ask a Question
About Us
XML Sitemap
Terms of Service
Ask a Question
According to the classical test theory, what is true score?
0
votes
71
views
asked
Jan 20
in
Psychology
by
EvieOconnor
(
2.3k
points)
According to the classical test theory, what is true score?
Your comment on this question:
Your name to display (optional):
Email me at this address if a comment is added after mine:
Email me if a comment is added after mine
Privacy: Your email address will only be used for sending these notifications.
Your answer
Your name to display (optional):
Email me at this address if my answer is selected or commented on:
Email me if my answer is selected or commented on
Privacy: Your email address will only be used for sending these notifications.
1
Answer
0
votes
answered
Jan 20
by
FredrickNobe
(
2.2k
points)
True score is the hypothetical construct measuring what is being assessed in a test free from errors.
Your comment on this answer:
Your name to display (optional):
Email me at this address if a comment is added after mine:
Email me if a comment is added after mine
Privacy: Your email address will only be used for sending these notifications.
Related questions
0
votes
1
answer
56
views
According to the theory of classical Test Theory, how is the reliability of a measure measured?
asked
Jan 20
in
Psychology
by
JoelPrentice
(
1.4k
points)
0
votes
1
answer
47
views
According to the theory of classical Test Theory, what is test validity?
asked
Jan 20
in
Psychology
by
JerroldCleve
(
2.0k
points)
0
votes
1
answer
15
views
According to the classical conditioning theory, why do we develop certain behaviours?
asked
Jan 16
in
Psychology
by
Aline0805519
(
1.8k
points)
0
votes
1
answer
46
views
According to the Pavlovian conditioning theory, what is classical conditioning?
asked
Jan 15
in
Psychology
by
LaureneLevin
(
2.7k
points)
0
votes
1
answer
51
views
According to the reliability theory, what is test-retest reliability?
asked
Jan 20
in
Psychology
by
QAMSibyl4514
(
2.0k
points)
37.4k
questions
37.2k
answers
2
comments
9.4k
users
Categories
All categories
Science
(12.0k)
Psychology
(10.5k)
Chemistry
(14.9k)
Welcome to Sarvan Science Q&A, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of the community.
...