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H. Brandon Tuck – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The decision for high-stakes exams to be a core part of the admission process has not been without controversy. Current literature on standardized tests has focused on the bias associated with high-stakes exams and how Black students have historically scored low on these tests. Insufficient research exists on how a post-affirmative action and…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, High Stakes Tests, African American Students, College Entrance Examinations
Julie J. Park; Nancy Wong; Pearl Lo; Jia Zheng; OiYan Poon; Kelly Rosinger – Journal of College Student Development, 2024
While preferable over requiring standardized tests, test-optional policies also have some unintended consequences. The limitations of test-optional policies do not warrant a return to required standardized testing, which is even more counterproductive to equity given that race and class are substantial predictors of performance on such tests.…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Admission Criteria, Admissions Officers, Access to Education
Kenneth A. Shores; Sanford R. Student – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
We use student-level administrative data from Delaware for 43,767 high school students across five 12th grade cohorts from 2017 to 2021. We apply Item Response Theory (IRT) to high school transcript data, treating courses as items and grades as ordered responses, to estimate both student transcript strength ([theta]) and course difficulty. We…
Descriptors: High School Seniors, Academic Records, Course Selection (Students), Grades (Scholastic)
Hjärne, Marcus S. – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2021
Extended time is a commonly-used test adaptation for standardised high-stakes tests. In this study, extended time provided for test-takers with dyslexia is examined. Data from standard versions of the Swedish Scholastic Aptitude Test (SweSAT) and data from test administrations where extra time is provided was used. Indications are that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Entrance Examinations, Testing Accommodations, Dyslexia
Fajer Shamsaldeen; Jue Wang; Soyeon Ahn – Language Testing in Asia, 2024
The use of college entrance exams for facilitating admission decisions become controversial, and the central argument is around the fairness of test scores. The Kuwait University English Aptitude Test (KUEAT) is a high-stakes test, but very few studies have examined the psychometric quality of the scores for this national-level assessment. This…
Descriptors: Test Bias, High Stakes Tests, College Entrance Examinations, Foreign Countries
Altintas, Ozge; Wallin, Gabriel – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2021
Educational assessment tests are designed to measure the same psychological constructs over extended periods. This feature is important considering that test results are often used for admittance to university programs. To ensure fair assessments, especially for those whose results weigh heavily in selection decisions, it is necessary to collect…
Descriptors: College Admission, College Entrance Examinations, Test Bias, Equated Scores
Paris, Joseph H.; Torsney, Benjamin; Fiorot, Sara; Pressimone Beckowski, Catherine – Journal of College Access, 2022
An increasing number of postsecondary institutions in the United States have introduced test-optional admissions policies primarily due to criticism of standardized admissions tests as potentially biased predictors of student success. However, the impact of the test-optional movement is largely unknown and continues to evolve amid the COVID-19…
Descriptors: College Admission, Admission Criteria, College Entrance Examinations, Standardized Tests
Steven Holtzman; Jonathan Steinberg; Jonathan Weeks; Christopher Robertson; Jessica Findley; David Klieger – ETS Research Report Series, 2024
At a time when institutions of higher education are exploring alternatives to traditional admissions testing, institutions are also seeking to better support students and prepare them for academic success. Under such an engaged model, one may seek to measure not just the accumulated knowledge and skills that students would bring to a new academic…
Descriptors: Law Schools, College Applicants, Legal Education (Professions), College Entrance Examinations
Bormanaki, Hamidreza Babaee; Ajideh, Parviz – Language Testing in Asia, 2022
This paper reports on an investigation of differential item functioning (DIF) in the Iranian Undergraduate University Entrance Special English Exam (IUUESEE) across four native language groups including the Azeri, the Persian, the Kurdish, and the Luri test takers via Rasch analysis. A total sample of 14,172 participants was selected for the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Test Bias, Undergraduate Students, Native Language
Mehrazmay, Roghayeh; Ghonsooly, Behzad; de la Torre, Jimmy – Applied Measurement in Education, 2021
The present study aims to examine gender differential item functioning (DIF) in the reading comprehension section of a high stakes test using cognitive diagnosis models. Based on the multiple-group generalized deterministic, noisy "and" gate (MG G-DINA) model, the Wald test and likelihood ratio test are used to detect DIF. The flagged…
Descriptors: Test Bias, College Entrance Examinations, Gender Differences, Reading Tests
Frey, Meredith C. – Journal of Intelligence, 2019
Fifteen years ago, Frey and Detterman established that the SAT (and later, with Koenig, the ACT) was substantially correlated with measures of general cognitive ability and could be used as a proxy measure for intelligence (Frey and Detterman, 2004; Koenig, Frey, and Detterman, 2008). Since that finding, replicated many times and cited extensively…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Academic Aptitude, Academic Achievement, Prediction
Amirian, Seyed Mohammad Reza – International Journal of Language Testing, 2020
The purpose of the present study was two-fold: (a) First, it examined fairness of Special English Test (SET) of Iranian National University Entrance Exam (INUEE) by analyzing Differential Item Functioning (DIF) with reading comprehension section of this test (b) second, it explored test takers' attitudes towards possible sources of unfairness and…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Test Bias, English for Special Purposes, Language Tests
Steedle, Jeffrey T. – ACT, Inc., 2018
Debilitating test anxiety is a general threat to validity if it biases assessment scores. Moreover, if bias differs between demographic groups, anxiety also raises concerns about test fairness. This study applied structural equation modeling to investigate possible measurement bias due to anxiety on the ACT® assessment and relationships among…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, College Entrance Examinations, Test Bias, Scores
Altintas, Özge; Kutlu, Ömer – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2019
This study aims to determine whether items in the Ankara University Examination for Foreign Students Basic Learning Skills Test function differently according to country and gender using the Recursive Partitioning Analysis in the Rasch Model. The variables used in the recursive partitioning of the data are country and gender. The population of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Test Bias, Foreign Students
Geiser, Saul – Center for Studies in Higher Education, 2020
One of the major claims of the report of University of California's Task Force on Standardized Testing is that SAT and ACT scores are superior to high-school grades in predicting how students will perform at UC. This finding has been widely reported in the news media and cited in several editorials favoring UC's continued use of SAT/ACT scores in…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Grade Point Average, Standardized Tests, College Admission