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Lee Cronbach

Lee Joseph Cronbach (April 22, 1916 – October 1, 2001) was an American educational psychologist who made contributions to psychological testing and measurement. At the University of Illinois, Urbana, Cronbach produced many of his works: the "Alpha" paper (Cronbach, 1951), as well as an essay titled The Two Disciplines of Scientific Psychology, in the American Psychologist magazine in 1957, where he discussed his thoughts on the increasing divergence between the fields of experimental psychology and correlational psychology (to which he himself belonged).

Lee Cronbach
BornApril 22, 1916
DiedOctober 1, 2001(2001-10-01) (aged 85)
Palo Alto, California, United States
NationalityUnited States
Known forCronbach's Alpha, The Generalizability Theory
AwardsE. L. Thorndike Award (1967)
James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award (2001)
Scientific career
FieldsPsychology, Educational Psychology

Cronbach was the president of the American Psychological Association, president of the American Educational Research Association, Vida Jacks Professor of Education at Stanford University and a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences,[1] the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,[2] and the American Philosophical Society.[3] Cronbach is considered to be "one of the most prominent and influential educational psychologists of all time."[4] A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Cronbach as the 48th most cited psychologist of the 20th century.[5]

Education and career

Born in Fresno, California. His father was a Jewish silk merchant.[6][7] At the age of 5, he scored 200 at an IQ test,[6] and was later selected to participate in Lewis Terman's long-term study of talented children.[8]

Cronbach graduated from Fresno High School at age 14,[9] but as the family could not afford to send him to University, he graduated from Fresno State College to become a teacher.[6] He received a bachelor's degree in chemistry and mathematics and latter a master's degree from the University of California, Berkeley. Cronbach had an interest in educational and psychological measurement due to Thurstone’s work on the measurement of attitudes. This work of Thurstone intrigued Cronbach, motivating him to complete and receive his doctorate in educational psychology from the University of Chicago in 1940.[4]

After teaching mathematics and chemistry at Fresno High School, Cronbach took faculty positions at the State College of Washington (now Washington State University), the University of Chicago, and the University of Illinois, finally settling at Stanford University in 1964. In 1956 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.[10]

Contributions to educational psychology

Cronbach's research can be clustered into three main areas: measurement theory, program evaluation, and instruction.[11] This includes several issues, such as the nature of the teaching-learning process, the measurement of variables describing instructional interactions, the evaluation of educational programs, and educational psychology’s aspiration as an emerging social science discipline. His contributions to measurement issues were of great importance to all educational psychologists. These contributions included improvements to the technology of psychometric modeling, as well as reformulations, which went beyond the mathematics of understanding the psychology of test performances.[4]

Educational psychologists have benefited from Cronbach's quest for a better explanation of learning in response to instruction; making countless contributions to educational psychology. Cronbach was able to sharpen the sensitivity of educational research, such as how different learners cope with the demands within different learning environments. He advocated the use of extensive local studies and field methods, producing useful narratives of teaching and learning. Cronbach's contributions include refining research questions which seek to understand the person-situation interactions in educational settings, recognizing the abandonment of strict scientism is in favour of a more pluralistic philosophical and empirical agenda, and emphasizing that the role of context is just as essential as improved interpretations of educational processes. Cronbach developed a framework for evaluation design, implementation and analysis.[4] He believed that the purpose of evaluation to provide constructive feedback for program implementers and clients was incorrect. On the contrary, he believed that it was the design, implementation and analysis which should reflect the feedback goal.

Cronbach has proven that research is valuable[dubious ] - to the extent where research serves the purpose of improving some aspect of social reality. This allowed Cronbach to lay out guidelines - much like a road-map - for researchers and practitioners of educational psychology spreading awareness of the challenges and prospects of conducting program evaluations.[4]

"The special task of the social scientist in each generation is to pin down the contemporary facts. Beyond that, [Cronbach] shares with the humanistic scholar and the artist in the effort to gain insight into contemporary relationships, and to align the culture’s view of man with present realities. To know man as he is is no mean aspiration."[12]

Cronbach's alpha

Cronbach worked on the concept of reliability which had a huge impact on the field of educational measurement. His earliest work was the publication of Cronbach's alpha[13] a method for determining the reliability of educational and psychological tests. This allowed new interpretations of the index of reliability. Cronbach had created this formula which could be applied throughout a variety of tests and other measurement instruments - gaining an enormous amount of popularity among practitioners.[4] Cronbach's alpha provided a measure of reliability from a single test administration thus showing that on repeated occasions, or even other parallel forms of testing, were not needed to estimate a test's consistency (this followed closely from the works of Kuder and Richardson). The alpha is useful because not only is it easily calculated, but it is also quite general and can be applied universally - for example: dichotomously scored multiple-choice items or polytimous attitude scales.[11]

The generalizability theory (the "G" theory)

As Cronbach’s work on reliability progressed, during the 1950s and 1960s it led to his work on the generalizability theory. He began his work with the aim to produce a handbook on measurement - allowing people to apply mathematical concepts to transform one’s behaviours and events into quantitative results. Cronbach believed that there were two flaws in the concept of taking observed test scores into true score and error components: he believed that true scores were "ill-defined" and errors were "all-inclusive". The Generalizability theory addresses the question of the relative influence on test performance based on different aspects of how tests are being administered to people. A question that would be addressed, for example, would be: "will students perform consistently on different occasions?" [4]

The Generalizability theory expanded when Cronbach became concerned that an undifferentiated error term covered up information about systematic variations which could be important in terms of test performance. With this in mind, he teamed up with two other members and developed a "random model" (introduced by the British statistician R.A. Fisher) where he was determined to figure out the complexities of error variance.[4] This "G" theory thus provided a combination of the psychological with the mathematical producing a comprehensive framework and statistical model which identified sources of measurement error.[11]

Cronbach's theory goes beyond examining consistency in a student’s relative standing in distribution – it recognizes and acknowledges that the particular item used in any given test is only a small indicator from a wider domain of knowledge. Only such extensions to reliability investigations were made possible by the Generalizability theory - which allowed researchers to address more realistic educational problems, and encouraged researchers to place substantial considerations when they made inquires to demonstrate that validity is important especially when evaluating information extracted from test scores.[4]

With the help from Paul Meehl, Cronbach placed the concept of validity theory in the centre of educational and psychological testing.[11] Cronbach & Meehl believed that "...it [is]imperative that psychologists make a place for [advocating construct validity] in their methodological thinking, so that its rationale, its scientific legitimacy, and its dangers may become explicit and familiar. This would be preferable to the widespread current tendency to engage in what actually amounts to construct validation research and use of constructs in practical testing, while talking an "operational" methodology which, if adopted, would force research into a mold it does not fit."[14] Cronbach acknowledged reliability as an important characteristic of a test, but believed that reliability and validity went hand-in-hand, and at times, 'trade-offs' were necessary in order to improve reliability. The paper, Construct Validity in Psychological Tests, compiled by both Cronbach and Meehl, represents their research efforts for over 50 years on validity.[11]

References

  1. ^ "Lee J. Cronbach". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
  2. ^ "Lee Joseph Cronbach". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
  3. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kupermintz, H. (2003). Lee J. Cronbach's contributions to educational psychology. In B. J. Zimmerman and D. H. Schunk (Eds.). Educational Psychology: A Century of Contributions, pp. 289-302
  5. ^ Haggbloom, Steven J.; Warnick, Renee; Warnick, Jason E.; Jones, Vinessa K.; Yarbrough, Gary L.; Russell, Tenea M.; Borecky, Chris M.; McGahhey, Reagan; Powell, John L., III; Beavers, Jamie; Monte, Emmanuelle (2002). "The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century". Review of General Psychology. 6 (2): 139–52. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.586.1913. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.6.2.139. S2CID 145668721.
  6. ^ a b c Fifty Modern Thinkers on Education: From Piaget to the Present edited by Joy Palmer, David Edward Cooper, Liora Bresler, page.102
  7. ^ A History of Psychology in Autobiography: Volume 8, edited by G. Lindzey (Stanford, Palo Alto, CA, 1989, p. 64).
  8. ^ Friedman, Howard (2011). The Longevity Project. New York: Hudson Street Press. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-1-59463-075-0.
  9. ^ In Memoriam: Lee J. Cronbach, 1916-2001 Richard J. Shavelson Educational Researcher Vol. 31, No. 2 (Mar., 2002), pp. 37-39 (3 pages) Published By: American Educational Research Association
  10. ^ View/Search Fellows of the ASA, accessed 2016-07-23.
  11. ^ a b c d e Shavelson, R. J. (2003). Lee J. Cronbach. The American Philosophical Society, 147(4), 380-385.
  12. ^ Cronbach, L. J. 1975. Beyond the two disciplines of scientific psychology. American Psychologist 30:671–84.
  13. ^ Cronbach, L. J. (1951) (originally developed by Louis Guttman in 1945),. Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests. Psychometrika, 16,297-334.
  14. ^ Cronbach, L. J., & Meehl, P.E. (1955). Construct validity in psychological tests. Psychological Bulletin, 52, 281-302.

Further reading

Cronbach, L. J., & Shavelson, R. J. (2004). My current thoughts on coefficient alpha and successor procedures. Educational and Psychological Measurement 64, no. 3, pp. 391–418

Sternberg, Robert J. (Ed); Pretz, Jean E. (Ed). (2005). Cognition and Intelligence: Identifying the Mechanisms of the Mind; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005. 345 pp

External links

  • Construct Validity in Psychological Tests, classic text by Cronbach and Paul E. Meehl 1955
  • Two Disciplines of Scientific Psychology essay by Cronbach, 1957
  • Guide to the Lee J. Cronbach Papers, Stanford University Libraries
Educational offices
Preceded by 66th President of the American Psychological Association
1957-58
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the

American Educational Research Association
1964-1965

Succeeded by

cronbach, joseph, cronbach, april, 1916, october, 2001, american, educational, psychologist, made, contributions, psychological, testing, measurement, university, illinois, urbana, cronbach, produced, many, works, alpha, paper, cronbach, 1951, well, essay, tit. Lee Joseph Cronbach April 22 1916 October 1 2001 was an American educational psychologist who made contributions to psychological testing and measurement At the University of Illinois Urbana Cronbach produced many of his works the Alpha paper Cronbach 1951 as well as an essay titled The Two Disciplines of Scientific Psychology in the American Psychologist magazine in 1957 where he discussed his thoughts on the increasing divergence between the fields of experimental psychology and correlational psychology to which he himself belonged Lee CronbachBornApril 22 1916Fresno California United StatesDiedOctober 1 2001 2001 10 01 aged 85 Palo Alto California United StatesNationalityUnited StatesKnown forCronbach s Alpha The Generalizability TheoryAwardsE L Thorndike Award 1967 James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award 2001 Scientific careerFieldsPsychology Educational PsychologyCronbach was the president of the American Psychological Association president of the American Educational Research Association Vida Jacks Professor of Education at Stanford University and a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences 1 the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 2 and the American Philosophical Society 3 Cronbach is considered to be one of the most prominent and influential educational psychologists of all time 4 A Review of General Psychology survey published in 2002 ranked Cronbach as the 48th most cited psychologist of the 20th century 5 Contents 1 Education and career 2 Contributions to educational psychology 3 Cronbach s alpha 4 The generalizability theory the G theory 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEducation and career EditBorn in Fresno California His father was a Jewish silk merchant 6 7 At the age of 5 he scored 200 at an IQ test 6 and was later selected to participate in Lewis Terman s long term study of talented children 8 Cronbach graduated from Fresno High School at age 14 9 but as the family could not afford to send him to University he graduated from Fresno State College to become a teacher 6 He received a bachelor s degree in chemistry and mathematics and latter a master s degree from the University of California Berkeley Cronbach had an interest in educational and psychological measurement due to Thurstone s work on the measurement of attitudes This work of Thurstone intrigued Cronbach motivating him to complete and receive his doctorate in educational psychology from the University of Chicago in 1940 4 After teaching mathematics and chemistry at Fresno High School Cronbach took faculty positions at the State College of Washington now Washington State University the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois finally settling at Stanford University in 1964 In 1956 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association 10 Contributions to educational psychology EditCronbach s research can be clustered into three main areas measurement theory program evaluation and instruction 11 This includes several issues such as the nature of the teaching learning process the measurement of variables describing instructional interactions the evaluation of educational programs and educational psychology s aspiration as an emerging social science discipline His contributions to measurement issues were of great importance to all educational psychologists These contributions included improvements to the technology of psychometric modeling as well as reformulations which went beyond the mathematics of understanding the psychology of test performances 4 Educational psychologists have benefited from Cronbach s quest for a better explanation of learning in response to instruction making countless contributions to educational psychology Cronbach was able to sharpen the sensitivity of educational research such as how different learners cope with the demands within different learning environments He advocated the use of extensive local studies and field methods producing useful narratives of teaching and learning Cronbach s contributions include refining research questions which seek to understand the person situation interactions in educational settings recognizing the abandonment of strict scientism is in favour of a more pluralistic philosophical and empirical agenda and emphasizing that the role of context is just as essential as improved interpretations of educational processes Cronbach developed a framework for evaluation design implementation and analysis 4 He believed that the purpose of evaluation to provide constructive feedback for program implementers and clients was incorrect On the contrary he believed that it was the design implementation and analysis which should reflect the feedback goal Cronbach has proven that research is valuable dubious discuss to the extent where research serves the purpose of improving some aspect of social reality This allowed Cronbach to lay out guidelines much like a road map for researchers and practitioners of educational psychology spreading awareness of the challenges and prospects of conducting program evaluations 4 The special task of the social scientist in each generation is to pin down the contemporary facts Beyond that Cronbach shares with the humanistic scholar and the artist in the effort to gain insight into contemporary relationships and to align the culture s view of man with present realities To know man as he is is no mean aspiration 12 Cronbach s alpha EditCronbach worked on the concept of reliability which had a huge impact on the field of educational measurement His earliest work was the publication of Cronbach s alpha 13 a method for determining the reliability of educational and psychological tests This allowed new interpretations of the index of reliability Cronbach had created this formula which could be applied throughout a variety of tests and other measurement instruments gaining an enormous amount of popularity among practitioners 4 Cronbach s alpha provided a measure of reliability from a single test administration thus showing that on repeated occasions or even other parallel forms of testing were not needed to estimate a test s consistency this followed closely from the works of Kuder and Richardson The alpha is useful because not only is it easily calculated but it is also quite general and can be applied universally for example dichotomously scored multiple choice items or polytimous attitude scales 11 The generalizability theory the G theory EditAs Cronbach s work on reliability progressed during the 1950s and 1960s it led to his work on the generalizability theory He began his work with the aim to produce a handbook on measurement allowing people to apply mathematical concepts to transform one s behaviours and events into quantitative results Cronbach believed that there were two flaws in the concept of taking observed test scores into true score and error components he believed that true scores were ill defined and errors were all inclusive The Generalizability theory addresses the question of the relative influence on test performance based on different aspects of how tests are being administered to people A question that would be addressed for example would be will students perform consistently on different occasions 4 The Generalizability theory expanded when Cronbach became concerned that an undifferentiated error term covered up information about systematic variations which could be important in terms of test performance With this in mind he teamed up with two other members and developed a random model introduced by the British statistician R A Fisher where he was determined to figure out the complexities of error variance 4 This G theory thus provided a combination of the psychological with the mathematical producing a comprehensive framework and statistical model which identified sources of measurement error 11 Cronbach s theory goes beyond examining consistency in a student s relative standing in distribution it recognizes and acknowledges that the particular item used in any given test is only a small indicator from a wider domain of knowledge Only such extensions to reliability investigations were made possible by the Generalizability theory which allowed researchers to address more realistic educational problems and encouraged researchers to place substantial considerations when they made inquires to demonstrate that validity is important especially when evaluating information extracted from test scores 4 With the help from Paul Meehl Cronbach placed the concept of validity theory in the centre of educational and psychological testing 11 Cronbach amp Meehl believed that it is imperative that psychologists make a place for advocating construct validity in their methodological thinking so that its rationale its scientific legitimacy and its dangers may become explicit and familiar This would be preferable to the widespread current tendency to engage in what actually amounts to construct validation research and use of constructs in practical testing while talking an operational methodology which if adopted would force research into a mold it does not fit 14 Cronbach acknowledged reliability as an important characteristic of a test but believed that reliability and validity went hand in hand and at times trade offs were necessary in order to improve reliability The paper Construct Validity in Psychological Tests compiled by both Cronbach and Meehl represents their research efforts for over 50 years on validity 11 References Edit Lee J Cronbach www nasonline org Retrieved 2022 09 21 Lee Joseph Cronbach American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 2022 09 21 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2022 09 21 a b c d e f g h i Kupermintz H 2003 Lee J Cronbach s contributions to educational psychology In B J Zimmerman and D H Schunk Eds Educational Psychology A Century of Contributions pp 289 302 Haggbloom Steven J Warnick Renee Warnick Jason E Jones Vinessa K Yarbrough Gary L Russell Tenea M Borecky Chris M McGahhey Reagan Powell John L III Beavers Jamie Monte Emmanuelle 2002 The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century Review of General Psychology 6 2 139 52 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 586 1913 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 6 2 139 S2CID 145668721 a b c Fifty Modern Thinkers on Education From Piaget to the Present edited by Joy Palmer David Edward Cooper Liora Bresler page 102 A History of Psychology in Autobiography Volume 8 edited by G Lindzey Stanford Palo Alto CA 1989 p 64 Friedman Howard 2011 The Longevity Project New York Hudson Street Press pp 76 77 ISBN 978 1 59463 075 0 In Memoriam Lee J Cronbach 1916 2001 Richard J Shavelson Educational Researcher Vol 31 No 2 Mar 2002 pp 37 39 3 pages Published By American Educational Research Association View Search Fellows of the ASA accessed 2016 07 23 a b c d e Shavelson R J 2003 Lee J Cronbach The American Philosophical Society 147 4 380 385 Cronbach L J 1975 Beyond the two disciplines of scientific psychology American Psychologist 30 671 84 Cronbach L J 1951 originally developed by Louis Guttman in 1945 Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests Psychometrika 16 297 334 Cronbach L J amp Meehl P E 1955 Construct validity in psychological tests Psychological Bulletin 52 281 302 Further reading EditCronbach L J amp Shavelson R J 2004 My current thoughts on coefficient alpha and successor procedures Educational and Psychological Measurement 64 no 3 pp 391 418Sternberg Robert J Ed Pretz Jean E Ed 2005 Cognition and Intelligence Identifying the Mechanisms of the Mind New York Cambridge University Press 2005 345 ppExternal links EditConstruct Validity in Psychological Tests classic text by Cronbach and Paul E Meehl 1955 Two Disciplines of Scientific Psychology essay by Cronbach 1957 Stanford Memorial Resolution about Lee Cronbach National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir Guide to the Lee J Cronbach Papers Stanford University LibrariesEducational officesPreceded byTheodore Newcomb 66th President of the American Psychological Association1957 58 Succeeded byHarry HarlowPreceded byNathaniel Gage President of the American Educational Research Association 1964 1965 Succeeded byBenjamin Bloom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lee Cronbach amp oldid 1130109230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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