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Cahyono, Sulistio Mukti; Kartawagiran, Badrun; Mahmudah, Fitri Nur – European Journal of Educational Research, 2021
Teachers who can adapt and be ready for all changes will also be able to provide a balance to increase the competence of vocational high school students. This is also not denied when teachers become assessors in student competency tests. The objectives of this study were to produce an instrument for the readiness of teachers as assessors; to…
Descriptors: Readiness, Vocational Education Teachers, Vocational High Schools, High School Students
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Siler, Stephanie Ann; VanLehn, Kurt – Journal of Experimental Education, 2015
The authors investigated whether some advantages of tutoring over other instructional methods are due to microadaptation, or, tutors basing their actions on assessments of tutees they develop during tutoring. In a 2 × 2 between-subjects experiment, independent variables were shared experience (tutors either worked with the same or a different…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Instructional Effectiveness, Teaching Methods, Teacher Student Relationship
Balow, Irving H.; And Others – Learning Disabilities Research, 1986
Psychometric issues arising from the use of minimum competency tests in local option states were examined in seven school districts. The effect of variability in reliability and difficulty level of subtests on the accuracy of decisions based on such tests is questioned, particularly as they affect mildly handicapped and marginal students.…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Difficulty Level, Mild Disabilities, Minimum Competency Testing
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Chang, Lei; And Others – Applied Measurement in Education, 1996
The influence of judges' knowledge on standard setting for competency tests was studied with 17 judges who took an economics teacher certification test while setting competency standards using the Angoff procedure. Judges tended to set higher standards for items they answered correctly and lower standards for items they answered incorrectly. (SLD)
Descriptors: Competence, Difficulty Level, Economics, Judges
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Mills, Craig N.; And Others – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 1991
An approach is presented to the definition of minimal competence for judges to use in standard setting. Panelists in standard setting must receive training to ensure that differences in rating result from differences in perceptions of item difficulty, not in differences of opinion about the definition of minimal competence. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cutting Scores, Decision Making, Definitions, Difficulty Level
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Reid, Jerry B. – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 1991
Training judges to generate item ratings in standard setting once the reference group has been defined is discussed. It is proposed that sensitivity to the factors that determine difficulty can be improved through training. Three criteria for determining when training is sufficient are offered. (SLD)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Difficulty Level, Evaluators, Interrater Reliability
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Plake, Barbara S.; Melican, Gerald J. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1989
The impact of overall test length and difficulty on the expert judgments of item performance by the Nedelsky method were studied. Five university-level instructors predicting the performance of minimally competent candidates on a mathematics examination were fairly consistent in their assessments regardless of length or difficulty of the test.…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Estimation (Mathematics), Evaluators, Higher Education