Rorschach test Essays

  • Controversial Psychology: The Rorschach Test

    2151 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Rorschach test, also known as the inkblot test, is one of the most controversial psychological assessments. Though controversial, it is also one of the most well known projective personality tests. This projective personality test has been used to help better understand clients and provide insight into an individual’s inner conscious and potential psychological problems. Although the idea of the inkblot procedure was present before Herman Rorschach, he was the first to use inkblots to help identify

  • Rorschach Tests: What Is Your Demeanor?

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    Your Demeanor? Rorschach Tests have been used in shrinks, doctors offices, hospitals, and lab centers. The Rorschach Test was invented by Mr. Hermann Rorschach and has been around since the 1920’s to determine mental intelligence and demeanor. It tests people by showing them inkblots and seeing what they see in the inkblots. Despite the fact that Rorschach tests have been interpreted as pointless and meaningless; they actually accurately portray someone's demeanor. Rorschach Tests portray a person’s

  • Final Test: The Final Faux-Rorschach Test

    711 Words  | 2 Pages

    The final test that I administer is called the Faux-Rorschach test. This test is constructed of three inkblot pictures and it intends to analyze a person’s emotional functioning. As I handed Steven each inkblot picture I asked him, “What may this be? His response for the first inkblot picture was

  • Eyes, the Power of Suggestion, and Rorschach Tests

    1120 Words  | 3 Pages

    Eyes, the Power of Suggestion and Rorschach Tests: An Introduction The human sense of sight is a very detailed and complex ability, which humans often take for granted. However, once they take time to think about it, they realize how complicated the process really is. The eye receives light from the outside with the cornea, which then travels through the nerves until the light reaches the brain. The brain processes this light into information about the outside world, and then the brain uses this

  • The Rorschach Inkblot Test

    2367 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Rorschach inkblot test is one of the most widely known psychological projective test of personality, and the most controversial. In general, projective tests are psychoanalytically based tools that assist clients to reveal their unconscious conflicts via responses towards ambiguous stimuli, and can also help psychologists to determine psychological disorders. Specifically, the Rorschach allows individuals to interpret a series of abstract inkblots based on their emotional and cognitive function

  • Pros And Cons Of Rorschach Test

    641 Words  | 2 Pages

    the clouds and seen images? Well, there is a test called the Rorschach that uses a series of inkblots the reveal information about a person. The Rorschach has been around for a long time and, many people are for it while a lot are against it. There is a lot of controversy surrounding the Rorschach test. The article by Erica Goode, “What’s in an Inkblot? Some say Not Much,” is an article that reveals the controversy surrounding the Rorschach test, a test to reveal one’s personalities. There are many

  • Rorschach Ink Blot Personality Test Essay

    1256 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Rorschach inkblot personality test was developed by Hermann Rorschach, a psychiatrist from Zurich, Switzerland in the early 1920s (Exner, 2003, p. 3). He died at the age of 37, seven months after Psycho diagnostick, was published. He derived this test from the children’s game of Blotto, also known as Klecksgraphie, which uses words and story association from images blotted onto white cards (Exner, 2003, p. 6). The test includes his ten selected inkblots, clinical findings, and theoretical bases

  • Observation Of Interpersonal Observation

    1580 Words  | 4 Pages

    exhibit any issues with her hearing, vision, motor skills, or word finding. Her mood was calm and composed, which was congruent with her affect. In addition, she exhibited a logical thought process, and did not display any signs of psychosis. Test Behavior Observations Mrs. Smith completed each assessment without a break, but took a 15-minutes in between each assessment. The measures were completed in a room

  • Uniqueness vs Creativity: A Critique of Modern Literature

    1726 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the realm of modern literature, a multitude of texts have produced a “thicket of information”(Goldsmith, “Uncreative writing” 1). In this “thicket”, all works seemingly blend together into one jumbled-up, problematic mess. To cut through this jungle of mundaneness, writers aspire to fabricate what they perceive as “creative” literature. There are even guides to doing this; though most are filled with cliché terms and phrases such as: explorer, ground-breaker, and going where no one has gone before(8)

  • Rorschach

    1264 Words  | 3 Pages

    many, the word Rorschach is quite unknown and to others it is simply known as the inkblot test and even then, the real meaning of the Rorschach test is never acknowledged. The Rorschach inkblot test is a psychological projective test of personality in which a subject’s interpretation of ten standard abstract designs are analyzed as measure of emotional and intellectual functioning and combination. Also, like other projective techniques, “it is based on the principle that subjects viewing neutral

  • The Different Forms of Psychometric Tests

    1371 Words  | 3 Pages

    Forms of Psychometric Tests Describe the different forms of Psychometric tests commonly used by employers to assist in employee selection and comment on the advantages and disadvantages of their use. Since the beginning of civilization, employers have testing prospective workers in order to select suitable candidates. Original tests would have been a rigidly controlled standardized system of examinations. However in 1883 Galton produced the first psychometric tests to measure intellect

  • Rorscharch Ink blot test

    1020 Words  | 3 Pages

    Scoring and Interpretation The scoring and interpretation of the Rorschach inkblot test is complex and requires extensive training and experience (Framingham 2014). Hence any online inkblot test may be of little use or validity. The Rorschach test is a simple package with 10 cards and unlike most psychological test kits; it does not contain a test manual with any instruction for scoring and interpreting. As a result a number of manuals and handbooks were put forward by persons such as Aronow and

  • Projective Testing for Analyzing Personality

    2530 Words  | 6 Pages

    Projective tests are a measure for analyzing personality. They are established in the idea of Sigmund Freud’s theory of unconscious processes. Projective techniques were first sought out as a means for people to unconsciously project their personality on to obscure or vague stimuli, possibly revealing the patient’s internal conflicts and hidden emotions. Projective testing has been found to significantly differ from other objective psychological tests through the range of possible responses making

  • 16 PF Personality Test

    1567 Words  | 4 Pages

    16 PF Personality Test Resolving the conflict of Reliability vs. Accuracy in the 16 PF test Introduction: For psychologists, one of the more popular theories espoused is the trait approach to personality, or “the idea that people have consistent personality characteristics that can be measured and studied” (Kalat, 2002, 512). However there are several problems that arise. First, there are significant cross-cultural differences, so one set of personality traits for one culture may differ

  • A Test of Character in The Crucible by Arthur Miller

    1488 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Test of Character in The Crucible A crucible refers to a harsh test, and in The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, each person is challenged in a severe test of his or her character or morals. Many more people fail than pass, but three notable characters stand out. Reverend John Hale, Elizabeth Proctor, and John Proctor all significantly change over the course of the play. All participants in the witch-hunt were influenced by the society that existed in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. Salem operated

  • An Extract from Divergent: Tris

    882 Words  | 2 Pages

    ceremony. We would take an aptitude test to give us a recommendation on which faction would best suit us but ultimately, the choice was ours in the end. The day before the choosing ceremony, we went to take an aptitude test. This test wasn’t any normal test. In this test, we entered a virtual world that put us in situations where we had to make quick choices that determined our outcome on the test. But the only catch to it was, you had no idea what type of test it would be beforehand. I will never

  • An Excerpt from Divergent

    575 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sixteen year old Beatrice Prior is from the Abnegation faction but selflessness never came naturally to her. When they must take their aptitude test to see which faction they will live in for the rest of their lives. Her test comes back inconclusive. She shows equal aptitude of Abnegation, Erudite, and Dauntless. On Choosing Day she decides to join Dauntless. After Tris jumps into the Pit and onto the net, Four's hand is the one she grabs and he pulls her out of the pit. He is later revealed to

  • Headaches On the Field

    765 Words  | 2 Pages

    Athletes put their bodies to the test. Strict diets and tough workouts that are designed to push their bodies to the limits. Athletes do insane things to be the best at what they do. Soccer players go through extreme measures to be the fastest, toughest, and most technical on the field. Soccer is the most popular sport in the world. In America soccer is becoming increasingly more popular every year. Soccer is played with almost no protection except for a six inch shin guard that is supposed

  • Teacher Interview Essay

    1261 Words  | 3 Pages

    and has been teaching here for the past six years. Mrs. Kregel was very nice and answered all of the questions I had. Although she prefers informal testing, such as homework, Katie still uses formal tests at the end of chapters or units. All of the second grade classrooms at Oelwein have the same tests for reading and math. Katie prefers informal testing and observation because she is able to check her students understanding of a certain topic or skill. I agree with Katie that using performance assessments

  • Assessment Collection Portfolio

    1285 Words  | 3 Pages

    being used to find strategies that can aid in more positive outcomes. Diagnostic Tests ... ... middle of paper ... ...C: http://www.slossonnews.com/S-DMS.html National Academies. (2014). Creating a Coordinated System of Education In. Retrieved from THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS: http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=6296&page=56 Schoen, H. L., & Ansley, T. N. (n.d.). Iowa Algebra Aptitude Test™ (IAAT™), Fifth Edition. Retrieved from Houghton Nifflin Harcourt Riverside: http://www