jillio
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Still the same case that two lower courts have dismissed.
What you are still failing to recognize is that just because the test was designed to test for specific items doesn't mean it actually accomplished that. That is one of the issues of validity. No one disputes that the test was supposed to test for certain things. What is being disputed is that the test actually did test for those things. That is the whole idea behind validity of an assessment instrument. Just because a test appears to have face validity does not mean that it has actual validity in the areas of content validity, criterion related validity, predictive validity, construct validity, factor analysis validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, or reliability.
What you are still failing to recognize is that just because the test was designed to test for specific items doesn't mean it actually accomplished that. That is one of the issues of validity. No one disputes that the test was supposed to test for certain things. What is being disputed is that the test actually did test for those things. That is the whole idea behind validity of an assessment instrument. Just because a test appears to have face validity does not mean that it has actual validity in the areas of content validity, criterion related validity, predictive validity, construct validity, factor analysis validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, or reliability.