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“Problems and Priorities in Pretesting Pondered”. Beth Noeller Grady Barnhill Carol O’Byrne. All Items are not Created Equal. Purposes of Pretesting. Gather performance information Add new content. What Information do you Gather?. Performance data Classical and IRT Difficulty
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“Problems and Priorities in Pretesting Pondered” Beth Noeller Grady Barnhill Carol O’Byrne
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
All Items are not Created Equal CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Purposes of Pretesting • Gather performance information • Add new content CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
What Information do you Gather? • Performance data • Classical and IRT • Difficulty • Discrimination • Cognitive Level Data • Content CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Difficulty • How hard is the item? • Usually expressed as a %. • What percent of the candidates get the item correct? • IRT b-value CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
What is a “good” difficulty? • What is your cut score? • The best difficulty is right around the cut score. • Too easy and too hard provide little information. • Between 40 & 90 for many testing programs CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Discrimination • How well an item differentiates between those who perform well on the test and those who get the item correct. • Correlation • Values from -1.0 to +1.0 • IRT a-value CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Positive Discrimination Values • Two people walking together ‘in step’ • Get an item correct and receive a high score on the examination • Perfect positive relationship +1.0 exam score Item correctness CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Negative Discrimination Values • Two people walking in opposite directions • Get an item correct and receive a low score on the examination • Perfect negative relationship -1.0 Item correctness CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska exam score
What is a “good” discrimination? • A positive relationship • The higher the better • Diversity of the candidate population • Greater than 0.15 Item correctness exam score CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Combining Difficulty and Disc. • Each quality by itself is linear • Together they can be depicted on a two-dimensional graph CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Summary CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
How do you use pretesting to add new content? • Get the pulse of your item bank • Inventory of acceptable scored items • Inventory of unused items CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Scored Items and Test Specs CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Pretest Needs CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska
Beth’s Contact Information Beth Noeller, PhD 319-339-3095 beth.noeller@act.org CLEAR 2008 Annual Conference Anchorage, Alaska