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Divgi, D. R. – 1978
One aim of criterion-referenced testing is to classify an examinee without reference to a norm group; therefore, any statements about the dependability of such classification ought to be group-independent also. A population-independent index is proposed in terms of the probability of incorrect classification near the cutoff true score. The…
Descriptors: Criterion Referenced Tests, Cutting Scores, Difficulty Level, Error of Measurement
deGruijter, Dato N. M. – 1980
The setting of standards involves subjective value judgments. The inherent arbitrariness of specific standards has been severely criticized by Glass. His antagonists agree that standard setting is a judgmental task but they have pointed out that arbitrariness in the positive sense of serious judgmental decisions is unavoidable. Further, small…
Descriptors: Cutting Scores, Difficulty Level, Error of Measurement, Mastery Tests
Reckase, Mark D.; And Others – 1985
Factor analysis is the traditional method for studying the dimensionality of test data. However, under common conditions, the factor analysis of tetrachoric correlations does not recover the underlying structure of dichotomous data. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that the factor analyses of tetrachoric correlations is unlikely to…
Descriptors: Correlation, Difficulty Level, Factor Analysis, Item Analysis

Huck, Schuyler W.; And Others – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1981
Believing that examinee-by-item interaction should be conceptualized as true score variability rather than as a result of errors of measurement, Lu proposed a modification of Hoyt's analysis of variance reliability procedure. Via a computer simulation study, it is shown that Lu's approach does not separate interaction from error. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Comparative Analysis, Computer Programs, Difficulty Level