EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
Absolute passivity in spite of urging. Typical remarks: “I
can’t.” “How can 1 when you stop meP . Jinn va 0
For other methods of scoring tests of personality, see
May and Hartshorne (199).
OMNIBUS TESTS
If accurate timing is not essential, and if the difficulty of
administering the tests must be reduced, a number of tests
may be combined into an omnibus test. The items of a
number of different tests are included to form the body of
the omnibus test, and the directions for all of them are
assembled at the beginning of the test form. The subject
is given a definite time in which to master the directions
for the different kinds of tasks. He is then allowed to work
on the test until time is called. This form of test saves
time and labor in administering, and has been widely used
in intelligence testing. The customary procedure in scor-
ing an omnibus test is to compute only a total score on the
test as a whole. But if the investigator makes use of such an
omnibus test he should get the separate scores for the vari-
ous types of items and study their value as if they were
separate tests.
Omnibus tests require of the person examined one ability
over and above the ones measured by the individual tests
of which they are composed: that of quick readjustment of
mental set or shift of attention from one type of perfor-
mance to another.
The various types of items may be arranged so as to
recur at regular intervals or in apparently haphazard order,
but without increasing in difficulty. The test is then called
a cycle omnibus test. If the items increase in difficulty
with each recurrence of a particular type of task, the test
is called a spiral omnibus test.
1From Downey Individual Will-Temperament Test. Copyright 1925,
by World Book Company, Yonkers-on-Hudson, New York.
20