Examlex
Match the following:
a.Mental fault;the mental element of a crime.b.A person who enters or remains on the land of another without permission or privilege to do so.c.The nonmental elements of a crime,including the wrongful physical act.d.Standard used by courts reviewing factual determinations when informal rulemaking or informal adjudication has occurred.e.A statement by an agency of general or particular applicability designed to implement,interpret,or process law or policy.f.The duty of care required to avoid being negligent;fictitious individual who is always careful,diligent,and prudent.g.Right of the federal government to regulate matters within its power to the exclusion of regulation by the states.h.A defense to a crime that arises when a law enforcement official induces a person to commit a crime when that person would not have done so otherwise.i.Publication of false statements resulting in harm to another's business or monetary interest if the publisher knows the statements are false or acts in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity.j.The crime of taking another's property by a person who was in lawful possession of it.k.The crime of entering a building with the intent to commit a felony.l.Injury to a person's reputation by the publication of false statements.m.A person privileged to enter or remain on land by virtue of the consent of the lawful possessor.n.A serious crime punishable by death or imprisonment in a penitentiary.o.An intervening event that occurs after the defendant's negligent conduct and that relieves him of liability.p.The nontrespassory invasion of another's interest in the private use and enjoyment of his land.q.A crime that is wrong in itself or morally wrong,such as murder.r.The intentional infliction of harmful or offensive bodily contact.s.Rule of circumstantial evidence permitting a jury to infer both negligent conduct and causation from the mere occurrence of certain types of events.t.Conduct which falls below the standard established by law for the protection of others against unreasonable risk of harm.u.A plaintiff's express or implied consent to encounter a known danger.v.Division of governing power between the federal government and the states.w.A federal statute intended to stop organized crime from infiltrating legitimate businesses.x.A hearing at which the accused is informed of the crime against him and he enters a ple
a.y.Intentional conduct that places another person in apprehension of immediate bodily harm or offensive contact.
-entrapment
Norm-Referenced Testing
Testing that compares an individual's performance or scores to a norm group or standard to evaluate relative standing.
T Scores
Standardized scores on psychological and educational tests that have a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10, used to compare individual performance against a normative sample.
Sten Scores
Derived from the name “standard 10,” a standard score that is commonly used on personality inventories and questionnaires. Stens have a mean of 5.5 and a standard deviation of 2.
Standard Error of Measurement (SEM)
The standard error of measurement (SEM) is an estimate of the variation in scores due to measurement error, indicating how repeated measures of a person on the same instrument might differ.
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