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Kala Krishna; Pelin Akyol; Esma Ozer – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2025
Exams are designed to rank students objectively by their abilities, including elements such as time limits, the number and difficulty of questions, and negative marking policies. Using data from a lab-in-field experiment, we develop and estimate a model of student behavior in multiple-choice exams that incorporates the effects of time constraints…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Student Behavior, Response Style (Tests), Time
Patrik Havan; Michal Kohút; Peter Halama – International Journal of Testing, 2025
Acquiescence is the tendency of participants to shift their responses to agreement. Lechner et al. (2019) introduced the following mechanisms of acquiescence: social deference and cognitive processing. We added their interaction into a theoretical framework. The sample consists of 557 participants. We found significant medium strong relationship…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Attention, Difficulty Level, Reflection
Karly S. Ford; Megan Holland Iantosca; Leandra Cate – Educational Researcher, 2025
In scholarly research, racial categories are typically taken for granted. However, race categories vary over time and geography and reflect the social beliefs of the people who use them. Informed by quantitative critical race theory analysis, we interrogate how race categories align (or not) with 24,000 U.S. higher education students' responses to…
Descriptors: College Students, Self Concept, Racial Identification, Classification
Gregory M. Hurtz; Regi Mucino – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
The Lognormal Response Time (LNRT) model measures the speed of test-takers relative to the normative time demands of items on a test. The resulting speed parameters and model residuals are often analyzed for evidence of anomalous test-taking behavior associated with fast and poorly fitting response time patterns. Extending this model, we…
Descriptors: Student Reaction, Reaction Time, Response Style (Tests), Test Items
Nana Kim; Daniel M. Bolt – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Some previous studies suggest that response times (RTs) on rating scale items can be informative about the content trait, but a more recent study suggests they may also be reflective of response styles. The latter result raises questions about the possible consideration of RTs for content trait estimation, as response styles are generally viewed…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Reaction Time, Response Style (Tests), Psychometrics
Martijn Schoenmakers; Jesper Tijmstra; Jeroen Vermunt; Maria Bolsinova – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Extreme response style (ERS), the tendency of participants to select extreme item categories regardless of the item content, has frequently been found to decrease the validity of Likert-type questionnaire results. For this reason, various item response theory (IRT) models have been proposed to model ERS and correct for it. Comparisons of these…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Response Style (Tests), Models, Likert Scales
Sijia Huang; Seungwon Chung; Carl F. Falk – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
In this study, we introduced a cross-classified multidimensional nominal response model (CC-MNRM) to account for various response styles (RS) in the presence of cross-classified data. The proposed model allows slopes to vary across items and can explore impacts of observed covariates on latent constructs. We applied a recently developed variant of…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Classification, Data, Models
Yanxuan Qu; Sandip Sinharay – ETS Research Report Series, 2024
The goal of this paper is to find better ways to estimate the internal consistency reliability of scores on tests with a specific type of design that are often encountered in practice: tests with constructed-response items clustered into sections that are not parallel or tau-equivalent, and one of the sections has only one item. To estimate the…
Descriptors: Test Reliability, Essay Tests, Construct Validity, Error of Measurement
Hung-Yu Huang – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2025
The use of discrete categorical formats to assess psychological traits has a long-standing tradition that is deeply embedded in item response theory models. The increasing prevalence and endorsement of computer- or web-based testing has led to greater focus on continuous response formats, which offer numerous advantages in both respondent…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Psychological Characteristics, Item Response Theory, Test Reliability
Françoise Guillemot; Florence Lacroix; Isabelle Nocus – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
The attitude of teachers towards inclusive education is a key issue for the success of inclusive education. Many studies have been designed to assess teachers' attitudes, but none have looked at the bias caused by teachers' non-response to questionnaires on their attitudes. Non-response biases are difficult to identify because it is impossible to…
Descriptors: Questionnaires, Teacher Attitudes, Bias, Response Style (Tests)
Chunyan Liu; Raja Subhiyah; Richard A. Feinberg – Applied Measurement in Education, 2024
Mixed-format tests that include both multiple-choice (MC) and constructed-response (CR) items have become widely used in many large-scale assessments. When an item response theory (IRT) model is used to score a mixed-format test, the unidimensionality assumption may be violated if the CR items measure a different construct from that measured by MC…
Descriptors: Test Format, Response Style (Tests), Multiple Choice Tests, Item Response Theory
Jean Philippe Décieux – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
The risk of multitasking is high in online surveys. However, knowledge on the effects of multitasking on answer quality is sparse and based on suboptimal approaches. Research reports inconclusive results concerning the consequences of multitasking on task performance. However, studies suggest that especially sequential-multitasking activities are…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Time Management, Handheld Devices, Learning Activities
Gisele Magarotto Machado; Nelson Hauck-Filho; Ana Celi Pallini; João Lucas Dias-Viana; Leilane Henriette Barreto Chiappetta Santana; Cristina Aparecida Nunes Medeiros da Silva; Felipe Valentini – International Journal of Testing, 2024
Our primary objective was to examine the impact of acquiescent responding on empathy measures. We selected the Affective and Cognitive Measure of Empathy (ACME) as the measure for this case study due to its composition--the affective dissonance scale consists solely of items that are semantically reversed relative to the empathy construct, while…
Descriptors: Cognitive Measurement, Empathy, Adults, Foreign Countries
Suh Keong Kwon; Guoxing Yu – Language Testing, 2024
In this study, we examined the effect of visual cues in a second language listening test on test takers' viewing behaviours and their test performance. Fifty-seven learners of English in Korea took a video-based listening test, with their eye movements recorded, and 23 of them were interviewed individually after the test. The participants viewed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Eye Movements
Joanna Williamson – Research Matters, 2025
Teachers, examiners and assessment experts know from experience that some candidates annotate exam questions. "Annotation" includes anything the candidate writes or draws outside of the designated response space, such as underlining, jotting, circling, sketching and calculating. Annotations are of interest because they may evidence…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Tests, Documentation, Secondary Education