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Collins, Michael A. J. – Collegiate Microcomputer, 1986
Ten different methods of using computer administered tests in college level biology are described: evaluation (or posttest), student self-evaluation, student self-remediation, class remediation, individual student remediation, pretesting, identification of problem areas, immediate feedback, group testing, and remote site testing. (Author/MBR)
Descriptors: Biology, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Software, Higher Education

Madsen, David H. – Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 1986
Discusses the role computers can play in the administration and scoring of tests and the expanded role of the counseling professional working with computer-assisted testing systems. Computer cost and value, program evaluation, staff training, and counselor and client attitudes toward computer-assisted testing are covered. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Cost Effectiveness, Counselor Attitudes, Counselor Role

Colberg, Magda – Personnel Psychology, 1985
Logic-based measurement brings into verbal reasoning tests the inferential objectivity of numerical reasoning tests. Implications for personnel selection include performance prediction, legal defensibility of personnel selection tests, design of economical tests, and test taxonomies which sample basic inferential processes. The linkage of…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Influences, Logic, Objective Tests
Montgomery, Jim – Computing Teacher, 1984
Describes how a microcomputer with a word processing program can be used efficiently to generate cloze tests, offering teachers an effective method of producing individualized materials for reading and language arts instruction. Examples of grammar worksheets focusing on proper nouns and adjectives, adjectives and adverbs, and plural words are…
Descriptors: Cloze Procedure, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Software, Elementary Secondary Education
Wedman, John F.; Stefanich, Greg P. – Educational Technology, 1984
Offers guidelines for designing computer-based testing which demands high-level cognitive functioning of students using computer-assisted instruction as a learning mode. Examples of conceptual, principle, and procedural learning evaluation approaches, strengths and weaknesses within the formats described, and suggestions for improving the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Objectives, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Assisted Testing, Evaluation Methods
Lupker, Stephen J. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1984
Discusses the findings of six studies that were undertaken to explore the phenomenon of semantic priming, questioning whether it is semantically or associatively based. Results indicated that the role of semantics in the priming process is somewhat limited. In addition, these results indicated that the amount of priming observed is somewhat task…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Concept Formation, Language Research, Lexicology
LDA of Minnesota, 2005
The purpose of this first issue of the 2005-2006 school year is to describe the Learning Disabilities Association's (LDA) activities available to any Adult Basic Education (ABE) program manager, instructor, tutor, or learner in the state of Minnesota at no cost through supplemental service grant funds. Activities of most interest to ABE providers…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Grants, Tutors, Learning Disabilities
Weissman, Alexander – 2003
This study investigated the efficiency of item selection in a computerized adaptive test (CAT), where efficiency was defined in terms of the accumulated test information at an examinee's true ability level. A simulation methodology compared the efficiency of 2 item selection procedures with 5 ability estimation procedures for CATs of 5, 10, 15,…
Descriptors: Ability, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Swygert, Kimberly A. – 2003
In this study, data from an operational computerized adaptive test (CAT) were examined in order to gather information concerning item response times in a CAT environment. The CAT under study included multiple-choice items measuring verbal, quantitative, and analytical reasoning. The analyses included the fitting of regression models describing the…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Item Response Theory, Participant Characteristics
van der Linden, Wim J. – 2002
The Sympson and Hetter (SH; J. Sympson and R. Hetter; 1985; 1997) method is a method of probabilistic item exposure control in computerized adaptive testing. Setting its control parameters to admissible values requires an iterative process of computer simulations that has been found to be time consuming, particularly if the parameters have to be…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, College Entrance Examinations, Computer Assisted Testing, Law Schools
van der Linden, Wim J.; Veldkamp, Bernard P. – 2002
Item-exposure control in computerized adaptive testing is implemented by imposing item-ineligibility constraints on the assembly process of the shadow tests. The method resembles J. Sympson and R. Hetter's (1985) method of item-exposure control in that the decisions to impose the constraints are probabilistic. However, the method does not require…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, College Entrance Examinations, Computer Assisted Testing, Law Schools

Green, Bert F. – 2002
Maximum likelihood and Bayesian estimates of proficiency, typically used in adaptive testing, use item weights that depend on test taker proficiency to estimate test taker proficiency. In this study, several methods were explored through computer simulation using fixed item weights, which depend mainly on the items difficulty. The simpler scores…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Bayesian Statistics, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Simulation
Reese, Lynda M.; Schnipke, Deborah L. – 1999
A two-stage design provides a way of roughly adapting item difficulty to test-taker ability. All test takers take a parallel stage-one test, and based on their scores, they are routed to tests of different difficulty levels in the second stage. This design provides some of the benefits of standard computer adaptive testing (CAT), such as increased…
Descriptors: Ability, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Difficulty Level
Plumer, Gilbert E. – 2000
In the context of examining the feasibility and advisability of computerizing the Law School Admission Test (LSAT), a review of current literature was conducted with the following goals: (1) determining the skills that are most important in good legal reasoning according to the literature; (2) determining the extent to which existing LSAT item…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, College Entrance Examinations, Computer Assisted Testing, Law Schools
van der Linden, Wim J.; Reese, Lynda M. – 2001
A model for constrained computerized adaptive testing is proposed in which the information on the test at the ability estimate is maximized subject to a large variety of possible constraints on the contents of the test. At each item-selection step, a full test is first assembled to have maximum information at the current ability estimate fixing…
Descriptors: Ability, Adaptive Testing, College Entrance Examinations, Computer Assisted Testing