Short Answer

Imagine you want to demonstrate the principle of 'reliability without validity' using a new example. How could you apply the logic of the index-finger and self-esteem example to a different physical measurement and psychological construct?

Question: Imagine you want to demonstrate the principle of 'reliability without validity' using a new example. How could you apply the logic of the index-finger and self-esteem example to a different physical measurement and psychological construct?

Sample answer: To demonstrate this, one could measure a person's height to assess their level of anxiety. Height is a stable physical trait that will yield highly consistent results across repeated measurements (high test-retest reliability), but height has no conceptual relationship to anxiety, meaning the measurement has no validity for that construct.

Key points:

  • Identify a stable physical trait for measurement.
  • Identify an unrelated psychological construct.
  • Explain why the measurement is consistent (reliable) but does not measure the construct (invalid).

Rubric: Grading Rubric: - Proposes a stable physical measurement (e.g., height, shoe size) and an unrelated psychological construct (e.g., anxiety, intelligence). - Explains how the physical measurement would be reliable (consistent over time) but completely invalid (unrelated to the psychological construct).

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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