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Applied Measurement in… | 1 |
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Impara, James C. | 7 |
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Plake, Barbara S.; Giraud, Gerald – 1998
In the traditional Angoff Standard Setting Method, experts are instructed to predict the possibility that a randomly selected, hypothetical minimally competent candidate will be able to answer each multiple choice question in the test correctly. These item performance estimates are averaged across panelists and aggregated to determine the minimum…
Descriptors: Estimation (Mathematics), Evaluators, Performance Factors, Standard Setting (Scoring)
Buckendahl, Chad; Impara, James C.; Giraud, Gerald; Irwin, Patrick M. – 2000
School districts and credentialing agencies use information gathered in standard setting studies to establish minimum passing scores (MPS) for a variety of purposes. These scores may be used to make decisions ranging from subject remediation to licensure. Multiple standard setting methods may be used to provide a range of scores to the…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Certification, Cutting Scores, Elementary Secondary Education
Impara, James C.; Plake, Barbara S.; Hertzog, Melody; Giraud, Gerald; Spies, Robert – 1998
Judgmental standard setting approaches rely on the perceptions of experts about examinee performance on a test. Traditional standard setting methods ask panelists to estimate how well a randomly selected hypothetical examinee who is representative of a well-defined target group, usually a minimally competent candidate (MCC), will perform on each…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Decision Making, Evaluation Methods, Judges
Giraud, Gerald; Impara, James C.; Plake, Barbara S. – Applied Measurement in Education, 2005
In cut score setting processes, subject matter experts are asked to make judgments about the likely performance of examinees at a targeted skill level. When cut scores are used in K-12 settings to separate students who have and have not mastered certain skills, the target examinee may be characterized as the barely proficient or barely master…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Cutting Scores, Standard Setting (Scoring), Workshops
Giraud, Gerald; Impara, James C.; Plake, Barbara S. – 2000
A key component of the Angoff (W. Angoff, 1971) method for setting cut scores is the target examinee. Expert judges are asked, following training and discussion, to consider the ability and the likely performance of some subset of examinees and to then estimate, item by item, the likely performance of such examinees on the test for which a cut…
Descriptors: Cutting Scores, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, Judges
Impara, James C.; Giraud, Gerald; Plake, Barbara S. – 2000
A study was conducted to explore empirically the effect of different definitions of the target examinee on the judgment of panelists setting a passing score. Two cut score studies were done in a school district for the same test within a 6-month period, and different definitions of the target candidate were provided for each study. In October…
Descriptors: Cutting Scores, Definitions, Groups, High Schools
Plake, Barbara S.; Impara, James C.; Spies, Robert; Hertzog, Melody; Giraud, Gerald – 1998
Setting performance standards on constructed-response assessments involving polytomously scored exercises presents a challenge for measurement practitioners. Some standard setting methods designed for use with multiple-choice, dichotomously scored assessments entail aggregating item performance estimates across a panel of experts. For these items,…
Descriptors: Constructed Response, Cutting Scores, High School Students, High Schools
Plake, Barbara S.; Impara, James C.; Hertzog, Melody; Giraud, Gerald; Spies, Robert – 1997
Judgmental standard setting approaches rely on the perceptions of experts about examinee performance on a test. Traditional standard setting methods ask panelists to predict the probability that a randomly selected, hypothetical minimally competent candidate (MCC) will correctly answer test questions. Item performance predictions are difficult for…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, High School Students, High Schools, Judges