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Rudner, Lawrence – 1998
This digest discusses the advantages and disadvantages of using item banks, and it provides useful information for those who are considering implementing an item banking project in their school districts. The primary advantage of item banking is in test development. Using an item response theory method, such as the Rasch model, items from multiple…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Difficulty Level, Item Banks
Hoover, Robert M. – 1988
This digest on test uses in counseling discusses the selection, administration, and scoring of tests; the interpretation of test results; and communication of results to clients. It examines such issues in testing as confidentiality, counselor preparation, client involvement in the testing process, computerized testing, and ethics. (NB)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Confidentiality, Counseling Techniques, Counselor Qualifications
Sampson, James P., Jr. – 1995
Computer-assisted testing (CAT) in counseling and therapy is becoming increasingly common due to dramatic improvements in cost-effectiveness and increased counselor familiarity with computer applications. The assumption underlying the use of CAT is that the effectiveness of counseling is improved by allocating repetitive computational and…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Uses in Education, Counseling, Counselors
Kress, Roy – 1988
Two trends have emerged in recent years in the diagnosis of remedial readers, which--when applied with caution--may be of reasonable value to the clinician and the teacher. One of these trends has been the promotion of informal assessments, and an accompanying plethora of commercial informal reading inventories (IRIs). These instruments are…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education, Informal Reading Inventories
Grist, Susan; And Others – 1989
Computerized adaptive tests (CATs) make it possible to estimate the ability of each student during the testing process. The computer presents items to students at the appropriate level, and students take different versions of the same test. Computerized testing increases the flexibility of test management in that: (1) tests are given on demand and…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Uses in Education
Dunkel, Patricia A. – 1999
Second language (L2) computer-adaptive testing (CAT) is a technologically advanced method of assessment in which the computer selects and presents test items to examinees according to the estimated level of the examinee's language ability. The basic notion of an adaptive test is to mimic automatically what a wise examiner would normally do.…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Language Proficiency