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ERIC Clearinghouse on Tests, Measurement, and Evaluation, Princeton, NJ. – 1983
This brief overview notes that an adaptive test differs from standardized achievement tests in that it does not consist of a certain set of items that are administered to a group of examinees. Instead, the test is individualized for each examinee. The items administered to the examinee are selected from a large pool of items on the basis of the…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Item Banks, Latent Trait Theory
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
Hsu, Tse-chi; Sadock, Shula F. – 1985
This report provides an overview of the current applications of computer technology to construct test items and/or to formulate tests according to sound measurement principles. The test items may be computer-generated from strategies programmed by test constructors, or pre-constructed by item writers and stored in computer memory. The tests…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Computers, Educational Research
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
Melville, S. Donald; And Others – 1987
In this report four educators discuss the issues which they see to be most current in the fields of testing, measurement and evaluation. The first section discusses the mastery of basic skills, defined by minimum levels of competence. Factors such as accountability, social policy, instructional implications, and psychometric issues are brought to…
Descriptors: Accountability, Achievement Rating, Computer Assisted Testing, Educational Improvement