
pmid: 26590608
The American Sign Language Comprehension Test (ASL-CT) is a 30-item multiple-choice test that measures ASL receptive skills and is administered through a website. This article describes the development and psychometric properties of the test based on a sample of 80 college students including deaf native signers, hearing native signers, deaf non-native signers, and hearing ASL students. The results revealed that the ASL-CT has good internal reliability (α = 0.834). Discriminant validity was established by demonstrating that deaf native signers performed significantly better than deaf non-native signers and hearing native signers. Concurrent validity was established by demonstrating that test results positively correlated with another measure of ASL ability (r = .715) and that hearing ASL students' performance positively correlated with the level of ASL courses they were taking (r = .726). Researchers can use the ASL-CT to characterize an individual's ASL comprehension skills, to establish a minimal skill level as an inclusion criterion for a study, to group study participants by ASL skill (e.g., proficient vs. nonproficient), or to provide a measure of ASL skill as a dependent variable.
Language Tests, Adolescent, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Persons with Hearing Disabilities, Empirical Research, United States, Sign Language, Young Adult, Humans, Comprehension, Hearing Loss, Students
Language Tests, Adolescent, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Persons with Hearing Disabilities, Empirical Research, United States, Sign Language, Young Adult, Humans, Comprehension, Hearing Loss, Students
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