Meaning Construct
What does Construct mean? Here you find 24 meanings of the word Construct. You can also add a definition of Construct yourself

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Construct


Make; build; put together items or arguments
Source: boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au

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Construct


Definition Hypothesised unobservable or mental trait that is used to explain individuals’ performance on an assessment. It is only measured trough observations or tasks performances from which the lev [..]
Source: glossary.uis.unesco.org

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Construct


1871 in linguistics, 1890 in psychology, 1933 in the general sense of "anything constructed;" from construct (v.), with altered pronunciation to distinguish noun from verb (as with produce, [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Construct


early 15c., from Latin constructus, past participle of construere "to heap up" (see construction). Related: Constructed; constructing.
Source: etymonline.com

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Construct


Something formed or constructed from parts. Related: Andy Warhol. Self-Portrait. 1966 Cindy Sherman. Untitled, Number 228. 1990 Earl S. Tupper. Pitcher and Creamer. 1946 Fernando Campana and Humberto [..]
Source: moma.org

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Construct


to build or erect.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Construct


any variable that can not be directly observed but rather is measured through indirect methods. (Examples: intelligence, motivation)
Source: allpsych.com

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Construct


noun. 1. an involved concept shaped and developed from a combination of less-complex concepts. 2. an informative design based upon scientifically proven and gauged occurrences or procedures. 3. with r [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Construct


Construct refers to any complex psychological concept. Examples would be a person's motivation, anger, personality, intelligence, love, attachment, or fear. A Construct's height, weight or d [..]
Source: alleydog.com

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Construct


The skill of developing or creating.
Source: dpi.wi.gov

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Construct


A concept. A theoretical creation that cannot be directly observed.
Source: researchconnections.org

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Construct


An abstract image, idea, or theory, especially a complex one, formed from a number of simpler observable elements. Constructs represent ideas constructed by scientists to help summarize a group of rel [..]
Source: nationsreportcard.gov

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Construct


An abstract image, idea, or theory, especially a complex one, formed from a number of simpler observable elements. Constructs represent ideas constructed by scientists to help summarize a group of rel [..]
Source: nces.ed.gov

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Construct


build; make.
Source: brt.uoregon.edu (offline)

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Construct


(n) an abstract or general idea inferred or derived from specific instances(v) make by combining materials and parts(v) put together out of artificial or natural components or parts(v) draw with suita [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Construct


The psychological trait or characteristic that an assessment tool has been designed to measure. Examples include achievement, cognitive ability, and interests.
Source: ncme.org (offline)

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Construct


Make; build; put together items or arguments
Source: matrix.edu.au

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Construct


A construct refers to the knowledge, skill or ability that's being tested. In a more technical and specific sense, it refers to a hypothesized ability or mental trait which cannot necessarily be directly observed or measured, for example, listening ability. Language tests attempt to measure the different constructs which underlie language abil [..]
Source: 2lti.com (offline)

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Construct


As a noun, a piece of syntax made up of smaller pieces. As a transitive verb, to create an object using a constructor.
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

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Construct


As a noun, a piece of syntax made up of smaller pieces. As a transitive verb, to create an object
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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Construct


The concept, characteristic or skill a test is designed to measure.
Source: parcconline.org (offline)

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Construct


A syntactical unit in a textual design language such as C/C++, Verilog, or VHDL. A construct may be a declaration, a statement, or an expression. Submit/Edit
Source: esd-alliance.org (offline)

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Construct


To make something by joining together materials.
Source: cfisd.net (offline)

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Construct


Something constructed from parts. ''The artwork was a construct of wire and tubes.'' ''Loops and conditional statements are constructs in computer programming.'' A concept or model. ''Bohr's [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org





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