Affiliation:
1. Auburn University
2. Montana State University
Abstract
The incremental effectiveness of the American College Testing Program Examination (ACT) was studied along with the effectiveness of the ACT alone and of high school grade-point average alone in predicting differential success in a three-year nurses' training program for 199 students over a 10-year period. Both high school grade-point average and ACT scores alone and combined were significantly related to first-, second-, and third-year grade-point averages of students in the school of nursing as evidenced by significant (p < .01) zero-order and multiple correlation coefficients. These zero-order and multiple correlation coefficients were converted to indices of forecasting efficiency which showed an increase in predictive power greater than 100% for each of the three years when the ACT was used to supplement high school grade-point average to predict grades in the school of nursing.
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Applied Psychology,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education
Cited by
5 articles.
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