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Ho, Andrew – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2016
This is a response to a focus article by Briggs and Peck (2015) in issue 13(2). It should have been published in issue 13(3-4) alongside a rejoinder by Briggs and Peck that did appear. Due to an oversight, it was not published there and appears here. See issue 13(3-4) for a rejoinder to this response. Briggs and Peck (2015) propose what amounts to…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Learning Processes, Misconceptions, Teacher Evaluation
Barton, Craig – American Educator, 2018
In this article, the author asserts that asking and responding to diagnostic questions is the single most important part of teaching secondary school mathematics. He notes the importance of formative assessment and recommends a formative assessment strategy that requires students to be public about their answers to questions, displaying their…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Formative Evaluation, Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods
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Ahern, David C.; Bridges, Ana J.; Faust, David – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2012
Our series of three chapters (Faust, Bridges, & Ahern, 2009a, 2009b; Bridges, Faust, & Ahern, 2009) on the methodology of identifying sexually abused children elicited a number of comments, both supportive and critical. The criticisms appear related to three primary issues or apparent misconceptions of our work, perhaps due in part to incomplete…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Misconceptions, Sexual Abuse, Identification
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Livingston, Michael – English Journal, 2012
At 12:30 p.m. on December 8, 1941, in front of a joint session of Congress, one day after Japanese planes struck Pearl Harbor and killed 2,402 Americans, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt declared December 7 a date that would live in infamy. He spoke of rage and betrayal, hardships and determination. Thirty-three minutes after he finished…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Grading, Scoring Rubrics, Figurative Language
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Kyngdon, Andrew – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2011
Black, Wilson, and Yao (this issue) commendably attempt to put descriptive theory at the center of pedagogy, assessment, and curriculum. The thrust of their article is that only through theories of learning will student progression be properly understood. Casting a critical eye over the faddish distinction between "formative" and "summative"…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Nuclear Physics, Psychometrics, Misconceptions
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Kyngdon, Andrew – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2011
Behavioral scientists have struggled with units of measurement for as long as they have struggled with measurement itself. Psychology's sole attempt at an explicit unit of measurement--the Lexile Framework for Reading (Stenner, Burdick, Sanford, & Burdick, 2006)--has been and continues to be ignored by the psychometric "cognoscenti."…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Psychometrics, Behavioral Sciences, Scientists
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Humphry, Stephen M. – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2011
This article presents Stephen Humphry's response to the commentaries for his article "The Role of the Unit in Physics and Psychometrics." The commentaries covered a range of important considerations and implications. Given that the author fully agrees with the majority of the content, attention will be confined mainly to points that call…
Descriptors: Physics, Criticism, Misconceptions, Calculus
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Treffinger, Donald J. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2009
In his 1982 response to the myth that "creativity is too difficult to measure," Dr. Joe Khatena (a long-time contributor to the literature on creativity), characterized creativity as the "most exciting dimension of mental functioning." Building on a three-dimensional view of creativity (emphasizing the "individual," the "environment," and the…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Creativity, Cognitive Processes, Measurement Techniques
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Killeen, Peter R. – Psychological Methods, 2010
Lecoutre, Lecoutre, and Poitevineau (2010) have provided sophisticated grounding for "p[subscript rep]." Computing it precisely appears, fortunately, no more difficult than doing so approximately. Their analysis will help move predictive inference into the mainstream. Iverson, Wagenmakers, and Lee (2010) have also validated…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Measurement Techniques, Research Design, Research Methodology
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Parks, Colleen M.; Yonelinas, Andrew P. – Psychological Review, 2007
In our comment on Wixted, we argued that most of the concerns he initially raised reflect misconceptions about the dual-process signal-detection (DPSD) model's underlying assumptions (e.g., threshold recollection can, in fact, be graded, and no task or population is expected to provide process-pure measures). Wixted's response does not directly…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Models, Evaluation Methods, Psychological Studies
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Cumming, Geoff – Psychological Methods, 2010
This comment offers three descriptions of "p[subscript rep]" that start with a frequentist account of confidence intervals, draw on R. A. Fisher's fiducial argument, and do not make Bayesian assumptions. Links are described among "p[subscript rep]," "p" values, and the probability a confidence interval will capture…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Measurement Techniques, Research Methodology, Validity
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Moon, Tonya R. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2009
The myth equating high-stakes testing with rigor and difficulty is one that can be debunked given the empirical work that has been conducted in this area. To completely debunk this myth in gifted education, the field must centralize efforts. Educators need to consider alternatives to the current system of assessment and the delivery of…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Misconceptions, Testing, High Stakes Tests
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Jubb, Richard; Robotham, David – Journal of European Industrial Training, 1997
Counters the following myths: competence has been defined; managerial effectiveness can be identified; management is generic; effectiveness can be measured; management is composed of skills, behaviors, or traits; and only maximum performance counts. (SK)
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Administrator Effectiveness, Competence, Evaluation Methods
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Purcell, Jeanette – Education + Training, 2001
Misconceptions about competency-based assessment in National Vocational Qualifications include the following: they focus only on workplace performance; they are appropriate only at vocational-technical, not higher/professional levels; they are concerned only with practical skills; and they do not encourage further development. Case study of…
Descriptors: Competency Based Education, Evaluation Methods, Foreign Countries, Innovation
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Jenkins, Jennifer – ELT Journal, 2006
My article set out a radical view of how I believe tests for students of EIL should change both immediately and in the longer term. Exam boards, as Lynda Taylor acknowledges, are by nature conservative, so it was welcome to see in her response signs that testers are beginning to change their attitude towards English language norms. Nevertheless,…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, English (Second Language), Opinions, Educational Change
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