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Political
| Types seeks to provide you with quality resources for learning more
about your personality and political orientations. These resources
include various assessment tools: surveys, scales, "tests," and so on.
Before you fill out any of these assessments, we encourage you to
consider the following questions and guidelines to ensure your results
are useful for you. What are the site user's rights and obligations?
The American Psychological Association has outlined rights and
obligations for you as a user of assessments. Please familiarize
yourself with these rights and obligations before completing
assessments on this site. The statement of your rights and obligations
is here. If
you decide to complete one of the assessments on this site, please be
aware that by doing so that you are waiving your right to receive any
further interpretation from Political | Types beyond the written
materials provided. One
of your more important rights is to have your results interpreted by a
qualified professional. Although Political | Types provides you written
feedback on your results, we do not offer you face-to-face or phone
interpretations (even though we are qualified to do so in some cases).
Thus, if you decide to complete one of the assessments on this site,
please be aware that by doing so that you are waiving your right to
receive any further interpretation from Political | Types beyond the
written materials provided. We
will work to address questions as time allows. Thus, if you have a
question, please feel free to post it to the appropriate forum.
What are the rights and obligations of Political | Types? Some of our key obligations--and how we address these--are listed below.
| Our Obligation |
What We Do |
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| Provide assessments that meet professional standards. |
Select assessments whose validity and reliability have been examined. Provide you with references to this information. (See discussion below on Reliability and Validity.) |
| Inform user of the assessment's purpose. |
Provide you this information in a brief introduction to the assessment. |
| Inform user of how results will be used. |
All
assessment results are used for two purposes only: research and
resources. Your individual results are for your personal development
endeavors. Your individual results also will be added to a database
with other responses to be used for further research on the
assessment(s). |
| Inform user of confidentiality. |
At
no time are you asked to provide information that would identify you
personally (such as e-mail address, phone number, and so on). We do
record IP addresses, but only to examine possible cases of multiple
instances of someone taking an assessment (when allowed). Thus, we seek
to provide you with both confidentiality and anonymity. |
| Provide oral or written explanation of your results within a reasonable time period. |
After
submitting your results for scoring, you will immediately receive a
written report with scores and discussion of your scores. You also will
be directed to a section with more information about the topic of
interest. |
We
also suggest you learn more about assessments, such as what constitutes
validity and reliability. Here is a short discussion of these topics.
We also suggest you check the links page for links to other sites that
cover assessment issues.
How valid is the assessment?
This question is the most important question to ask about an
assessment. A valid assessment measures what it is supposed to measure.
Thus, when you answer a valid assessment, you know your results are
useful in addressing the issues that led you to take the assessment.
Assume,
for example, that you wanted to learn more about your political
orientation and thus selected an assessment on a website that was
labeled "Political Orientation Survey". What if the "Survey" only
contained various math problems such as addition and subtraction
problems. Would you say this survey was valid? No. It doesn't appear to
measure political orientation.
Determining
the validity of an assessment often takes years of study involving
numerous studies. When possible, Political | Types will provide you
with information about the validity of an assessment. Even with
this information, however, please keep in mind that no assessment is
perfect and that numerous things can influence any one individual's results. We recommend you think about any of your assessment results as
one piece of a puzzle. Other pieces of the puzzle include reading more
about the topic of the assessment, talking with trusted friends about
the results, and -- most importantly -- remembering that you ultimately
decide who you are (not the assessment). ...keep in mind that no assessment is perfect...
How reliable is the assessment? A
useful assessment will be reliable in that the assessment provides
consistent results. For example, assume you weigh yourself on a scale
and find you weigh 120 pounds. Two hours later you weigh yourself again
and find you weigh 168 pounds. Is the scale reliable? No, it doesn't
provide consistent results.
What
if you weighed yourself three times over the course of the day and
obtained the following results : 121, 120, 119. Would the scale be
reliable? Yes. Would it be valid? Maybe not. What if you "really"
weighed 180 pounds. The scale would be reliable (consistent) but
inaccurate -- and thus not valid.
A
valid scale--by definition--must also be reliable. Thus, researchers
who develop assessments also study reliability. When possible,
Political | Types will give you information about an assessment's
reliability.
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