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Contemporary Business Reports, 5th International Edition by Shirley Kuiper - Test Bank

Contemporary Business Reports, 5th International Edition by Shirley Kuiper - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS   The observation that acts as a bridge between what we can measure and what we cannot(constructs) is known as a(n)? indicator concept direct …

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Contemporary Business Reports, 5th International Edition by Shirley Kuiper – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS

 

  1. The observation that acts as a bridge between what we can measure and what we cannot(constructs) is known as a(n)?
  2. indicator
  3. concept
  4. direct observable
  5. indirect observable
  6. dependent variable
ANS:  A PG:  133 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: New

 

  1. Which of the following sequences illustrates the progression of measurement steps in a fully structured scientific study?
  2. Conceptualization, nominal definition, operational definition, and measurements in the real world
  3. Nominal definition, conceptualization, operational definition, and measurements in the real world
  4. Operational definition, conceptualization, nominal definition, and measurements in the real world
  5. Nominal definition, operationalization, conceptualization, and real-world measurements
  6. Conceptualization, operationalization, nominal definition, and real-world measurements
ANS:  A PG:  138 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

 

  1. Professor Smith gave an exam on Monday. On Wednesday Smith gave the same class the same exam. Professor Smith was clearly interested in assessing the exam’s:
  2. reliability
  3. validity
  4. face validity
  5. conceptualization
  6. precision
ANS:  A PG:  152-154 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Reliability involves:
  2. whether a particular technique applied repeatedly to the same object would yield the same results each time
  3. ensuring accuracy
  4. ensuring that your measure measures what you think it should measure
  5. ensuring precision
  6. ensuring both accuracy and precision
ANS:  A PG:  152 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Modified
  1. The specification of concepts in scientific inquiry depends on:
  2. nominal, operational, and real definitions
  3. real definitions
  4. nominal and operational definitions
  5. nominal and real definitions
  6. operational and real definitions
ANS:  C PG:  136-137 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Professor Spence decided to define socioeconomic status as a combination of income and education. Spence then determined the questions to be asked in a survey and the categories of responses. Spence was assigning socioeconomic status:
  2. a nominal definition only
  3. an operational and a real definition
  4. a real definition only
  5. a nominal and a real definition
  6. a nominal and an operational definition
ANS:  E PG:  136-137 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Techniques used to create reliable measures include:
  2. asking only about things respondents are likely to know the answer to
  3. using measures that have proved their reliability in previous research
  4. being clear about what you’re asking
  5. asking about things relevant to respondents
  6. all of these choices are used to create reliable measures

 

ANS:  E PG:  152-154 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Conceptions are:
  2. empirical measurements
  3. variables
  4. mental images
  5. hypotheses
  6. definitions
ANS:  C PG:  130 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Most social scientists would not accept the conceptualization of prejudice as foot size because such a measurement lacks:
  2. precision
  3. reliability
  4. accuracy
  5. validity
  6. all of these choices
ANS:  D PG:  154-156 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Hudson et al. developed a series of questions to examine sexual attitudes (SAS). The SAS scores of religious fundamentalists, a group believed to be conservative regarding sexual expression, were compared with the scores of social work graduate students, a group believed to be liberal regarding sexual expression. The researchers were examining the instrument’s:
  2. split-half reliability
  3. split-half validity
  4. criterion validity
  5. criterion reliability
  6. construct validity
ANS:  C PG:  155 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Ross is looking to examine if the indicators that make up her measurement of romantic attraction are truly related to one another and make for an accurate representation of the variable she is researching. What sort of validity is she examining?
  2. split-half validity
  3. face validity
  4. criterion-related validity
  5. content validity
  6. construct validity
ANS:  E PG:  156 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: New

 

  1. A measurement of personality that produces observable, correct results, but that are not consistent would be considered
  2. valid and reliable
  3. valid, but not reliable
  4. not valid, but reliable
  5. neither valid nor reliable
  6. partially valid, fully reliable
ANS:  B PG:  157-158 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: New

 

  1. Professor Myth asked respondents whether or not they had ever been divorced. One year later Professor Myth asked the same respondents the same question. Myth found that with repeated applications of the measure different responses were obtained for the same respondent. This means that the measuring instrument was:
  2. unreliable
  3. invalid
  4. unreliable or the value on the variable had changed
  5. lacking face validity
  6. inaccurate
ANS:  C PG:  152 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. A complete conceptualization involves:
  2. specifying dimensions only
  3. specifying indicators only
  4. specifying dimensions and identifying the various indicators of each dimension
  5. specifying indicators and identifying the various dimensions of each indicator
  6. specifying variables and their attributes
ANS:  C PG:  133-140 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Because low marital satisfaction should lead to divorce, Professor Rogers checked his measure of marital satisfaction by examining whether couples with low marital satisfaction scores later obtained divorces and those with high levels of marital satisfaction remained married.  This illustrates the use of:
  2. criterion-related validity
  3. face validity
  4. content validity
  5. construct validity
  6. test-retest validity
ANS:  A PG:  155-156 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. A nominal definition:
  2. is a statement of the essential nature of some entity
  3. is a statement detailing what will be involved in measuring some entity
  4. is a statement that allows us to observe some entity
  5. is a statement that assigns a definition to a concept
  6. none of these choices
ANS:  D PG:  136 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. A survey question asking voters which political party they are affiliated with (Democrat, Republican, Independent) would be considered:
  2. mutually exclusive
  3. exhaustive
  4. interchangeable
  5. ratio scale
  6. ordinal scale
ANS:  A PG:  144 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: New

 

  1. Which of the following is a nominal variable?
  2. education
  3. age
  4. employment status
  5. occupational prestige
  6. need to know the attributes to determine the level of measurement
ANS:  E PG:  144 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. A measure of religiosity that is extremely consistent, but is actually targeting the respondent’s political affiliation could be considered:
  2. partially reliable, completely valid
  3. valid and reliable
  4. not valid, but reliable
  5. neither valid nor reliable
  6. valid, but not reliable
ANS:  C PG:  157 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: New

 

  1. Measuring how people feel about proposed income tax hikes when you really want to know how well informed they are on the proposal is a problem of operationalization concerning:
  2. the use of single or multiple indicators
  3. how observations are going to be made
  4. the specific dimensions of the variable to be studied
  5. the relevant range of variations
  6. the degree of precision needed between extremes
ANS:  C PG:  142-144 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

 

  1. Professor Miller argues that there are three dimensions to the quality of a relationship (belonging/affirmation, interdependence, and intimacy).  Miller designed an instrument to measure quality of a relationship.  She notices that no items in the instrument tap the intimacy dimension.  Her measure lacks:
  2. reliability
  3. content validity
  4. predictive validity

 

  1. construct validity
  2. internal consistency
ANS:  B PG:  156 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Professor Tyler wrote a proposal to study the impact of authoritarianism on child rearing practices.  She began her research by reviewing the meaning of authoritarianism.  Based on this review, she formulated her own definition of authoritarianism.  This process illustrates:
  2. operationalization
  3. the interchangeability of indicators
  4. conceptualization
  5. validity assessment
  6. reliability assessment
ANS:  C PG:  133 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Shipley developed a NEW test to measure IQ.  Using his test, someone with an IQ of 180 would be considered twice as intelligent as someone with an IQ of 90 and someone with an IQ of 90 was three times as intelligent as someone with an IQ of 30.  Shipley’s test treats IQ as a(n):
  2. nominal variable
  3. interval variable
  4. ratio variable
  5. ordinal variable
  6. none of these choices
ANS:  C PG:  145-146 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Dr. Jones is developing a research study in which he plans to use the length of a participant’s ring finger to determine mathematical prowess.  At the most basic level, his indicator fails which test for validity?
  2. face validity
  3. content validity
  4. predictive validity
  5. criterion-related validity
  6. construct validity
ANS:  A PG:  155 TYPE:  Applied SOURCE: New

 

  1. Classifying someone as employed or not employed treats employment as:
  2. a ratio variable
  3. an interval variable
  4. an ordinal variable
  5. a nominal variable
  6. a dependent variable
ANS:  D PG: 144 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Professor Tilton measured the variable “feelings toward drafting women” with the categories strongly agree, agree, indifferent, disagree, and strongly disagree. Professor Tilton was using the            level of measurement.
  2. nominal
  3. interval
  4. ratio
  5. ordinal
  6. not enough information to decide
ANS:  D PG:  144-145 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. The variable educational level was measured as last year in school completed (i.e., none, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, grades, etc.). It is, therefore, measured at the          level.
  2. nominal
  3. interval
  4. ratio
  5. ordinal
  6. not enough information to decide
ANS:  C PG:  145-146 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. What is the lowest level of measurement in which there is an exact difference between attribute values?
  2. Nominal
  3. Interval
  4. Ratio
  5. Ordinal
  6. All of these choices
ANS:  B PG:  145 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. When we fall into the trap of believing that terms have real meanings we are guilty of:
  2. reification
  3. measurements that lack reliability
  4. measurements that lack validity
  5. confusing reliability with validity
  6. confusing validity with reliability
ANS:  A PG:  133 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Professor Salton created the categories of less than 20 hours, 20 hours to 40 hours, 40 hours to 60 hours, and 60 hours or more for the variable “number of hours employed outside the home.” Salton’s scheme is:
    1. a nominal variable
    2. mutually exclusive
    3. exhaustive
    4. an ordinal variable
    5. mutually exclusive and exhaustive
ANS:  C PG: 144 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Verifying the validity of a measurement using an outside source of information, such as SAT scores or GPA when examining a measure of academic performance is using:
  2. face validity
  3. construct validity
  4. criterion-related validity
  1. content validity
  2. correlational validity
ANS: C PG: 155 TYPE:  Applied SOURCE: New

 

  1. Which of the following is NOT a means of assessing the reliability of measuring   devices?
  2. test-retest
  3. split-half
  4. construct-correlation
  5. using established measures
  6. using reliable research workers
ANS: C PG: 152-154 TYPE:  Factual SOURCE: New

 

  1. Jeremy can’t decide whether he should ask people whether they “very strongly agree,” “agree,” “disagree, “very strongly disagree” or whether they simply “agree” or “disagree” with statements about the war in Iraq. Jeremy is dealing with the problem of:
  2. whether to use single or multiple indicators of a concept
  3. the range of variation
  4. whether to use a ratio or ordinal measurement
  5. whether to use a ratio or interval measurement
  6. whether to use single or multiple dimensions
ANS: B PG: 142 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. A researcher entering gender data collected from a mailed survey is working with
  2. constructs
  3. direct observables
  4. indirect observables
  5. reification
  6. a conceptualization
ANS: C PG: 132 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: New

 

  1. Sarah has compiled a list of 40 indicators of prejudice and its dimensions. She finds that women are more prejudiced than men on some of the indicators but not on others.  Sarah should:
  2. check to see if the two sent of indicators represent different dimensions of prejudice
  3. conclude the women are more prejudiced than men
  4. throw out the 40 indicators and start over
  5. conclude that there was an error in her analysis
  6. get a new sample
ANS: A PG: 133-136 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

 

 

TRUE-FALSE QUESTIONS

 

  1. If a measure is reliable, it must also be valid.
ANS:  F PG:  157-158 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Conceptualization is the development of research procedures that will result in empirical observations representing those concepts in the real world.
ANS:  F PG:  133 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Validity refers to the link between the operational and conceptual definitions.
ANS:  T PG:  154-155 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Precision and accuracy are synonyms.
ANS:  F PG:  151 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Even if a pre-existing measure of a construct of interest exists, it is a better idea to create your own so you understand it better.
ANS:  F PG:  154 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: New

 

  1. A split-half reliability test taps the idea of the general stability of the instrument over time.
ANS:  F PG:  154 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Predictive validity is often used as another term for criterion-related validity.
ANS:  T PG: 155-156 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. It is impossible to have several indicators of only one concept.
ANS:  F PG:  133-137 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Changing definitions almost inevitably results in different descriptive conclusions.
ANS:  T PG:  141 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Precise measurement is more important than accurate measurement.
ANS:  F PG: 151-152 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. Number of arrests would be an example of a interval measurement
ANS:  F PG: 145-146 TYPE: Applied SOURCE: New

 

  1. A nominal measure can have only two categories.
ANS:  F PG: 144 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

 

  1. Definitions are more problematic for descriptive research than for explanatory research.
ANS:  T PG:  140 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. The split-half technique for assessing reliability is closely linked to concept of the interchangeability of indicators
ANS:  T PG:  154 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. If unsure as a researcher how specific a measurement needs to be, it is best to be more general to simplify data collection.
ANS:  F PG: 142 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: New

 

  1. Numbers assigned to ranks on an ordinal scale can legitimately be added, multiplied, subtracted, and divided.
ANS:  F PG:  145 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. One only need a nominal definition of a concept before beginning the process of data collection
ANS:  F PG:  138 TYPE: Factual SOURCE: New

 

  1. The test retest method assumes that the phenomena under study does not change.
ANS: T PG: 153 TYPE: Conceptual SOURCE: Pickup

 

 

SHORT ANSWERS/ESSAYS

 

  1. Please conceptualize child abuse (or another abstract concept of your choice). What

      indicators would you use to measure the concept? Are there dimensions to the concept?

Answers will vary.  One possible answer is that child abuse refers to the mistreatment of a minor by his/her parent or guardian.  Dimensions of child abuse might include physical abuse, emotional abuse, and psychological abuse.  Indicators might include: 1) Have you ever been slapped by a parent? (Yes, No), 2) Have you ever been beaten by a parent with a whip or belt?  (Yes, No), 3) Have you ever been told that you were stupid by your mother/father? (Yes, No), and so on.

PG:  Entire chapter      SOURCE: Pickup

 

  1. As an extension of the previous question, then ask the students to evaluate their measurement in terms of validity. What do they think might be some potential shortcomings, or how does their measurement meet the requirements for validity?

Answers will vary, but should focus on issues of face validity (which hopefully their answers will have!), construct validity, content validity, as well as possible items of use to establish criterion-related validity.

PG: 154-156                SOURCE: New

 

 

  1. How would you measure family size at the nominal, ordinal, and ratio levels?

Ratio level: How many people (excluding yourself) are in your immediate (nuclear,

family of orientation)?  (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, …….)

Ordinal level: Use the same question with attributes of (less than 3) (3 – 6) (more than 6)

or small, medium, and large.

Nominal level: Are there other people (besides you) in your immediate family? (Yes, No)

or Do you have any brothers? (Yes, No)

NOTE: Students sometimes claim the ordinal classification of (0-3) (3-5) (6 or more) is ratio because they “see” the 0 in the first category (0-3).

PG: 144-146                SOURCE: Pickup

 

 

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