This study examined the questions of whether employment and educational tests demonstrate either differential validity or test unfairness to Hispanic Americans relative to the majority group. Relevant data from 19 published and unpublished studies formed the basis of the review and analysis. Results for employment tests, based on a very large amount of data, indicated that differential validity occurs no more frequently than would be expected on the basis of chance plus the operation of various statistical artifacts. The frequencies of slope and intercept differences between Hispanic and majority regressions were also within the chance range. A similar pattern of results obtained for the more limited amount of data available on educational tests. Taken together, the results provide strong evidence that tests are neither differentially valid for, nor unfair to, Hispanics. These findings are consistent with the results of previous studies of test validity and fairness for blacks. THE question of whether tests used in employment and educational settings are appropriate for minority groups is an important one today. Researchers have approached this question from two different directions: from the point of view of subgroup validity differences and from the point of view of selection fairness. Although these two phenomena are related, they are by no means identical. For example, a test with equal subgroup validities can nevertheless, under certain cir-