2020
DOI: 10.1037/amp0000586
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The enhanced examination for professional practice in psychology: A viable approach?

Abstract: Health disciplines have increasingly required competency-based evaluations as a licensure prerequisite. In keeping with this trend, the Association of State and Provincial Psychology Boards (ASPPB) has begun to develop a second part to the Examination for Professional Practice in Psychology (EPPP). The resulting 2-part examination is collectively referred to as the Enhanced EPPP. Part 1 of the Enhanced EPPP, which consists of the current exam, is designed to be an assessment of knowledge. Part 2 of the Enhance… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…
Turner et al (2021) subtly relapse in conceptualizing the Examination for Professional Practice in Psychology (Part 2-Skills) exam as a competency evaluation despite Association of State and Provincial Psychology Boards' (ASPPB) prior concession that Part 2 measures only the knowledge of skills (not skill competency). They do not address the purpose of redundant evaluation or the other concerns raised in Callahan et al (2020). Instead, Turner et al remain narrowly focused on defense of content validity and a reliance on outdated standards that fail to meet contemporary expectations for assessment of health care professionals.
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confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…
Turner et al (2021) subtly relapse in conceptualizing the Examination for Professional Practice in Psychology (Part 2-Skills) exam as a competency evaluation despite Association of State and Provincial Psychology Boards' (ASPPB) prior concession that Part 2 measures only the knowledge of skills (not skill competency). They do not address the purpose of redundant evaluation or the other concerns raised in Callahan et al (2020). Instead, Turner et al remain narrowly focused on defense of content validity and a reliance on outdated standards that fail to meet contemporary expectations for assessment of health care professionals.
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confidence: 99%
“…The Examination for Professional Practice in Psychology (EPPP) is an international exam, yet neither the existing nor Part 2 exam reflects contemporary measure development guidelines for evaluation of linguistically and culturally diverse peoples (International Test Commission, 2018). Therefore, it is not surprising that the existing EPPP evidences strong English bias (Callahan et al, 2020) and is not required by jurisdictions where English is not the predominant language (e.g., Quebec, Puerto Rico). Within jurisdictions that do require the EPPP, the prevalence of students for whom English is a second language averages 10% (nearing 20% in the largest jurisdictions; Hussar et al, 2020).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…In the same vein, critical analysis must be expanded to Part 2 during beta-testing in 2020 and beyond. A broad array of strategies to validate that exam are offered in a recent American Psychologist article by Callahan and colleagues (2020). On the eve of Part 2 being offered in some jurisdictions (see www.asppb.net/news/478458), a preponderance of score discrepancies might encourage the publisher to eliminate the possibility that extraneous influences of demographic variables will impinge on the fair assessment of skill for all future psychologists.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…
Callahan et al (2020) asserted that the Examination for Professional Practice in Psychology (Part 2-Skills) has not undergone appropriate validation. Although they recognized that content validity is the foundation of licensure examinations, they suggested additional validational strategies that are not recommended for licensure examination development.
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confidence: 99%