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Showing 76 to 90 of 120 results Save | Export
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Spineti, John P.; Hambleton, Ronald K. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1977
The effectiveness of various tailored testing strategies for use in objective based instructional programs was investigated. The three factors of a tailored testing strategy under study with various hypothetical distributions of abilities across two learning hierarchies were test length, mastery cutting score, and starting point. (Author/JKS)
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Criterion Referenced Tests, Cutting Scores
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Wang, Tianyou; Hanson, Bradley A.; Lau, Che-Ming A. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1999
Extended the use of a beta prior in trait estimation to the maximum expected a posteriori (MAP) method of Bayesian estimation. This new method, essentially unbiased MAP, was compared with MAP, essentially unbiased expected a posteriori, weighted likelihood, and maximum-likelihood estimation methods. The new method significantly reduced bias in…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Bayesian Statistics, Computer Assisted Testing, Estimation (Mathematics)
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Chuah, Siang Chee; Drasgow, Fritz; Luecht, Richard – Applied Measurement in Education, 2006
Adaptive tests offer the advantages of reduced test length and increased accuracy in ability estimation. However, adaptive tests require large pools of precalibrated items. This study looks at the development of an item pool for 1 type of adaptive administration: the computer-adaptive sequential test. An important issue is the sample size required…
Descriptors: Test Length, Sample Size, Adaptive Testing, Item Response Theory
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Wainer, Howard; Kiely, Gerard L. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1987
The testlet, a bundle of test items, alleviates some problems associated with computerized adaptive testing: context effects, lack of robustness, and item difficulty ordering. While testlets may be linear or hierarchical, the most useful ones are four-level hierarchical units, containing 15 items and partitioning examinees into 16 classes. (GDC)
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Context Effect, Item Banks
Stocking, Martha L. – 1994
As adaptive testing moves toward operational implementation in large scale testing programs, where it is important that adaptive tests be as parallel as possible to existing linear tests, a number of practical issues arise. This paper concerns three such issues. First, optimum item pool size is difficult to determine in advance of pool…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Item Banks, Standards
McCormick, Douglas J. – 1978
Tailored testing increases the efficiency of tests by individually selecting for each person a set of items from an item pool so that the difficulty of the items selected will be such as to maximize the information provided by the score. The tailored testing procedure designed by Cliff orders persons and items on a common ordinal scale and…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Branching, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Programs
Wainer, Howard; And Others – 1991
A series of computer simulations was run to measure the relationship between testlet validity and the factors of item pool size and testlet length for both adaptive and linearly constructed testlets. Results confirmed the generality of earlier empirical findings of H. Wainer and others (1991) that making a testlet adaptive yields only marginal…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Simulation, Item Banks
Yi, Qing; Wang, Tianyou; Ban, Jae-Chun – 2000
Error indices (bias, standard error of estimation, and root mean square error) obtained on different scales of measurement under different test termination rules in a computerized adaptive test (CAT) context were examined. Four ability estimation methods were studied: (1) maximum likelihood estimation (MLE); (2) weighted likelihood estimation…
Descriptors: Ability, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Error of Measurement
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Garrison, Wayne M.; Baumgarten, Bruce S. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1986
A computerized adaptive testing procedure for measuring mathematical skills of 60 deaf college students was evaluated. Ability estimates were compared for stability to those obtained earlier from conventional testing. Adaptive testing increased measurement efficiency by reducing test length. Student attitudes toward computerized testing were…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Comparative Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Hearing Impairments
Vos, Hans J. – 1997
The purpose of this paper is to derive optimal rules for variable-length mastery tests in case three mastery classification decisions (nonmastery, partial mastery, and mastery) are distinguished. In a variable-length or adaptive mastery test, the decision is to classify a subject as a master, a partial master, a nonmaster, or continuing sampling…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Classification, Computer Assisted Testing, Concept Formation
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Deville, Craig; O'Neill, Thomas; Wright, Benjamin D.; Woodcock, Richard W.; Munoz-Sandoval, Ana; Gershon, Richard C.; Bergstrom, Betty – Popular Measurement, 1998
Articles in this special section consider (1) flow in test taking (Craig Deville); (2) testwiseness (Thomas O'Neill); (3) test length (Benjamin Wright); (4) cross-language test equating (Richard W. Woodcock and Ana Munoz-Sandoval); (5) computer-assisted testing and testwiseness (Richard Gershon and Betty Bergstrom); and (6) Web-enhanced testing…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Educational Testing, Equated Scores, Measurement Techniques
De Champlain, Andre; Gessaroli, Marc E. – 1996
The use of indices and statistics based on nonlinear factor analysis (NLFA) has become increasingly popular as a means of assessing the dimensionality of an item response matrix. Although the indices and statistics currently available to the practitioner have been shown to be useful and accurate in many testing situations, few studies have…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Chi Square, Computer Assisted Testing, Factor Analysis
Harris, Dickie A.; Penell, Roger J. – 1977
This study used a series of simulations to answer questions about the efficacy of adaptive testing raised by empirical studies. The first study showed that for reasonable high entry points, parameters estimated from paper-and-pencil test protocols cross-validated remarkably well to groups actually tested at a computer terminal. This suggested that…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Cost Effectiveness, Difficulty Level
Davey, Tim; Pommerich, Mary; Thompson, Tony D. – 1999
In computerized adaptive testing (CAT), new or experimental items are frequently administered alongside operational tests to gather the pretest data needed to replenish and replace item pools. The two basic strategies used to combine pretest and operational items are embedding and appending. Variable-length CATs are preferred because of the…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Item Banks, Measurement Techniques
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Wainer, Howard; And Others – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1992
Computer simulations were run to measure the relationship between testlet validity and factors of item pool size and testlet length for both adaptive and linearly constructed testlets. Making a testlet adaptive yields only modest increases in aggregate validity because of the peakedness of the typical proficiency distribution. (Author/SLD)
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Comparative Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Simulation
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