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Dobria, Lidia – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Performance assessments rely on the expert judgment of raters for the measurement of the quality of responses, and raters unavoidably introduce error in the scoring process. Defined as the tendency of a rater to assign higher or lower ratings, on average, than those assigned by other raters, even after accounting for differences in examinee…
Descriptors: Simulation, Performance Based Assessment, Performance Tests, Scoring
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Plant, Jennifer L.; van Schaik, Sandrijn M.; Sliwka, Diane C.; Boscardin, Christy K.; O'Sullivan, Patricia S. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2011
Self-efficacy is thought to be important for resuscitation proficiency in that it influences the development of and access to the associated medical knowledge, procedural skills and crisis resource management (CRM) skills. Since performance assessment of CRM skills is challenging, self-efficacy is often used as a measure of competence in this…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Self Efficacy, Performance Based Assessment, Performance Tests
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Klein, Stephen P.; Stecher, Brian – Journal of Personnel Evaluation in Education, 1991
The experience of the RAND Corporation as it develops the performance test component of a licensing examination for secondary school teachers is explored. The performance test, composed of written tasks that simulate important teacher activities, corresponds to portions of other professional examinations. (SLD)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Licensing Examinations (Professions), Performance Based Assessment, Performance Tests
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Kane, Michael T. – Evaluation and the Health Professions, 1992
A proposed model for the validity of measures of professional competence treats validation as the evaluation of inferences drawn from test scores, focusing on evaluation, generalization, and extrapolation. The model is used to indicate strengths and weaknesses of assessments of professional competence: observations of performance, simulations, and…
Descriptors: Competence, Evaluation Methods, Generalization, Inferences
Foucar-Szocki, Diane – 1994
This report describes educators' collaborative self-directed experiences in learning about and producing alternative forms of assessment for use in elementary-level classrooms. The report analyzes the Virginia Standards of Learning and local curricula in English/Language Arts, Mathematics, Social Studies, and Science/Health in grades 2-4, to…
Descriptors: Check Lists, Elementary Education, Evaluation Methods, Inservice Teacher Education
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Grover, Barbara W. – Journal of Personnel Evaluation in Education, 1991
Teacher assessments should reduce the discrepancy between what is and what should be true for effective teaching and professional standards. Performance Assessment Centers are an attractive way to improve teacher assessment. In such centers, candidates participate in simulated job tasks tapping abilities related to the assessment's focus. (SLD)
Descriptors: Agency Role, Assessment Centers (Personnel), Educational Assessment, Evaluation Methods
Jones, Michael H.; And Others – 1990
In the domain of performance assessment, the errors-and-omissions (EOT) test falls between a work-sample test and a simulation test. The examinee works with a sample of material from the work environment. The correct answers and the exact criteria for acceptable performance are known in advance. For this study, EOTs were used for assessing entry…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Beginning Teachers, Commercial Art, Educational Assessment