Posts Tagged 5013
Dr. Green’s PTE 5013– MMY & TiP Class
Well, like I promised, here’s a blog posting about your class this evening.
First things first…
The Mental Measurements Yearbook (MMY) The purpose of the Yearbook is to provide evaluative information to promote informed test selection. Typical test entries include descriptive information, professional reviews, and reviewer references.
To be included, a test must be:
1.) commercially available
2.) be published in the English language
3. ) and be new, revised, or widely used since it last appeared in the series.
The MMY in print in the Reference Collection goes back to the first volume and up to volume 15. The library’s MMY online subscription provides coverage from volume 9 to the present (vlme. 17).
Also, remember your “Advanced Search” tab in the electronic MMY:
This can allow you to do all sorts of funky things like search only certain yearbooks, test categories, publication years, etc.
So, if you’re really want to impress your professor, I might suggest taking a look at her own reviewed tests
Now, what about those Tests in Print?
What is Tests In Print?
Tests in Print (TIP) serves as a comprehensive bibliography to all known commercially available tests that are currently in print in the English language. Information includes test purpose, test publisher, in-print status, price, test acronym, intended test population, administration times, publication date(s), and test author(s). Tests in Print also guides readers to candidly critical test reviews published in the Mental Measurements Yearbook series.
Now, remember, TiP does NOT contain test reviews, but it will give you quick information about tests such as publisher information, test time, scores, etc.
It will also give you something called a “cross reference” which will tell you where in the MMY you can find a review for the test you’re looking at.
For this cross reference, TiP is telling you to go to the 14th edition of MMY and then to test number 54 for the test review.
If you ever see a T before a number such as T3:153– This is a cross reference to another Tests in Print edition; thus, you would need to go to Tests in Print edition 3 then look at test number 153.
Alrightie… Have a glorious evening and please remember that if you need any additional assistance please contact us through the Ask Us! link on the library homepage or come visit us at the reference desk!
We love questions!
>^..^< Amanda
P.S. Also, don't forget you can do a search for (but no reviews) for what is where in the MMY on the Buros Testing website.
Add comment July 2, 2009
Dr. Green’s PTE 5013– The MMY
Well, like I promised, here’s a blog posting about your class this evening.
First things first…
The Mental Measurements Yearbook (MMY) The purpose of the Yearbook is to provide evaluative information to promote informed test selection. Typical test entries include descriptive information, professional reviews, and reviewer references.
To be included, a test must be:
1.) commercially available
2.) be published in the English language
3. ) and be new, revised, or widely used since it last appeared in the series.
The MMY in print in the Reference Collection goes back to the first volume and up to volume 15. The library’s MMY online subscription provides coverage from volume 9 to the present (vlme. 17).
Also, remember your “Advanced Search” tab in the electronic MMY:
This can allow you to do all sorts of funky things like search only certain yearbooks, test categories, publication years, etc.
So, if you’re really want to impress your professor, I might suggest taking a look at her own reviewed tests
Now, what about those Tests in Print?
What is Tests In Print?
Tests in Print (TIP) serves as a comprehensive bibliography to all known commercially available tests that are currently in print in the English language. Information includes test purpose, test publisher, in-print status, price, test acronym, intended test population, administration times, publication date(s), and test author(s). Tests in Print also guides readers to candidly critical test reviews published in the Mental Measurements Yearbook series.
Now, remember, TiP does NOT contain test reviews, but it will give you quick information about tests such as publisher information, test time, scores, etc.
It will also give you something called a “cross reference” which will tell you where in the MMY you can find a review for the test you’re looking at.
For this cross reference, TiP is telling you to go to the 14th edition of MMY and then to test number 54 for the test review.
If you ever see a T before a number such as T3:153– This is a cross reference to another Tests in Print edition; thus, you would need to go to Tests in Print edition 3 then look at test number 153.
Alrightie… Have a glorious evening and please remember that if you need any additional assistance please contact us through the Ask Us! link on the library homepage or come visit us at the reference desk!
We love questions!
>^..^< Amanda
P.S. Also, don't forget you can do a search for (but no reviews) for what is where in the MMY on the Buros Testing website.
Add comment October 23, 2008
PTE 5013– Dr. Jackson’s Foundations of Educational Research
Session One– Literature Searching
Finding the appropiate databases for your topic
Once you have visited the library’s website and clicked on the Find Articles (Databases) link, please note the “databases by subject” sorter in the upper left corner.
For this class you might consider choosing the Advanced Professional Services or Education option which would lead you to the following databases:
ERIC (Educational Resource Information Center) – Education related articles, documents, lesson plans, technical reports and reviews
Professional Development Collection - Full-text of 500 journals in education, 300 peer reviewed
PsychInfo - Full-text, citations, and abstracts to articles, books, and other materials related to pyschology
SocIndex - Full-text and citations to articles, books, and conference papers in sociology
**Please remember that when accessing these databases off campus that you will have to log in with your UConnect username and password.**
You might also consider clicking on the subjects psychology, sociology or health and medecine if your topics branch into those fields.
Each of our databases indexes unique periodicals thus your results from database to database will vary.
Ensuring your source is Peer-Reviewed or a Scholarly source
Using Ulrich’s Periodical Directory will ensure that your article is from a peer reviewed or refereed journal not a popular literature periodical or a trade publication. Please remember that you will need to type the journal name (not article name) into the search box.
Ulrich’s is a definite must when searching via ERIC as ERIC indexes all sorts of publications such as trade publications and does not allow for a peer-reviewed search option as some of the other databases allow.
Backtracking…
What I mean by backtracking is taking a reference you see at the end of an article or mentioned on a website and going to the original source.
All you need to do is look for the journal name in which the article appeared and then go to our Journal Titles tab on our frontpage and enter your information there. Here, it will show you whether we own access to that journal and in what format (print or digital).
If you ever come accross an article but do not have the journal’s name in which it was published, please either stop by the Reference desk or contact us electronically and we will try our hardest to track down where that article came from!
Please remember that if you ever need a hand in your research process, you can always contact us at the Reference desk via email, phone (405-974-2878), chat, or text!
And, you can always email me personally @ alemon2@ucok.edu!
I’ll see you around the library!
Amanda
Add comment June 12, 2008

