Descriptor
Author
| Chang, Lei | 3 |
| Plake, Barbara S. | 3 |
| Impara, James C. | 2 |
| McGinty, Dixie | 2 |
| Neel, John H. | 2 |
| Cope, Ronald T. | 1 |
| DeMauro, Gerald E. | 1 |
| Garrido, Mariquita | 1 |
| Goodwin, Laura D. | 1 |
| Hsu, Yu-Sheng | 1 |
| Irwin, Patrick | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Reports - Research | 10 |
| Speeches/Meeting Papers | 9 |
| Journal Articles | 3 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 3 |
| Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
| Researchers | 2 |
Location
| New Jersey | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
| National Assessment of… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
van der Linden, Wim J.; Vos, Hans J.; Chang, Lei – 2000
In judgmental standard setting experiments, it may be difficult to specify subjective probabilities that adequately take the properties of the items into account. As a result, these probabilities are not consistent with each other in the sense that they do not refer to the same borderline level of performance. Methods to check standard setting…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Judges, Probability, Standard Setting
Irwin, Patrick M.; Plake, Barbara S.; Impara, James C. – 2000
Judgmental standard setting methods, such as the W. H. Angoff (1971) method, use item performance estimates as the basis for determining the minimum passing score (MPS). Therefore, the accuracy of these item performance estimates is crucial to the validity of the resulting MPS. Recent researchers, (L. A. Shephard 1994; J. Impara, 1997) have called…
Descriptors: Estimation (Mathematics), Judges, Licensing Examinations (Professions), Performance Factors
Plake, Barbara S.; Impara, James C.; Irwin, Patrick – 1999
Judgmental standard setting methods, such as the Angoff method (W. Angoff, 1971), use item performance estimates as the basis for determining the minimum passing score (MPS). Therefore the accuracy of these item performance estimates is crucial to the validity of the resulting MPS. Recent researchers (L. Shepard, 1994; J. Impara, 1997) have called…
Descriptors: Cutting Scores, Estimation (Mathematics), Judges, Performance Factors
Peer reviewedGoodwin, Laura D. – Applied Measurement in Education, 1999
The relations between Angoff ratings (minimum passing levels) and the actual "p" values for borderline examinees were studied with 115 examinees taking the Certified Financial Planner examination. Findings do not suggest that the Angoff judges' task is nearly impossible, but they do suggest the need to improve standard-setting…
Descriptors: Cutting Scores, Difficulty Level, Judges, Licensing Examinations (Professions)
Peer reviewedPlake, Barbara S.; And Others – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1994
The comparability of Angoff-based item ratings on a general education test battery made by judges from within-content and across-content domains was studied. Results with 26 college faculty judges indicate that, at least for some tests, item ratings might be essentially equivalent regardless of judge's content specialty. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, General Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedChang, Lei; And Others – Applied Measurement in Education, 1996
The influence of judges' knowledge on standard setting for competency tests was studied with 17 judges who took an economics teacher certification test while setting competency standards using the Angoff procedure. Judges tended to set higher standards for items they answered correctly and lower standards for items they answered incorrectly. (SLD)
Descriptors: Competence, Difficulty Level, Economics, Judges
Chang, Lei; And Others – 1994
The present study examines the influence of judges' item-related knowledge on setting standards for competency tests. Seventeen judges from different professions took a 122-item teacher-certification test in economics while setting competency standards for the test using the Angoff procedure. Judges tended to set higher standards for items they…
Descriptors: Economics, Evaluators, Experience, Interrater Reliability
McGinty, Dixie; Neel, John H. – 1996
A new standard setting approach is introduced, called the cognitive components approach. Like the Angoff method, the cognitive components method generates minimum pass levels (MPLs) for each item. In both approaches, the item MPLs are summed for each judge, then averaged across judges to yield the standard. In the cognitive components approach,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Criterion Referenced Tests, Evaluation Methods, Grade 3
Cope, Ronald T. – 1987
This study used generalizability theory and other statistical concepts to assess the application of the Angoff method to setting cutoff scores on two professional certification tests. A panel of ten judges gave pre- and post-feedback Angoff probability ratings of items of two forms of a professional certification test, and another panel of nine…
Descriptors: Certification, Correlation, Cutting Scores, Error of Measurement
Rock, D. A.; And Others – 1980
An experiment was designed that varied cutting score procedures, instructions, and types of judges in order to address the following questions concerning the Real Estate Licensing Examination: (1) Will the cutting score levels produced by groups of judges from differing backgrounds (academicians vs. practitioners vs. lawyers) using the same method…
Descriptors: Competence, Content Analysis, Criterion Referenced Tests, Cutting Scores
Webb, Melvin W., II; Miller, Eva R. – 1995
As constructed-response items become an integral part of educational assessments, setting student performance standards on constructed-response items has become an important issue. Two standard-setting methods, one used for setting standards on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) in reading in grade 8 and the other used to set…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Constructed Response, Criteria, Educational Assessment
McGinty, Dixie; Neel, John H.; Hsu, Yu-Sheng – 1996
The cognitive components standard setting method, recently introduced by D. McGinty and J. Neel (1996), asks judges to specify minimum levels of performance not for the test items, but for smaller portions of items, the component skills and concepts required to answer each item correctly. Items are decomposed into these components before judges…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Criterion Referenced Tests, Elementary Education, Evaluation Methods
DeMauro, Gerald E. – 1995
Studies of the Angoff method of standard setting suggest that judges agree in their estimates of the relative difficulties of test questions for minimally competent examinees and that each judge's estimates correlate well with the observed item difficulties for examinees whose total test scores are near the judge's personal standard (G. E.…
Descriptors: Ability, Competence, Construct Validity, Difficulty Level
Garrido, Mariquita; Payne, David A. – 1987
Minimum competency cut-off scores on a statistics exam were estimated under four conditions: the Angoff judging method with item data (n=20), and without data available (n=19); and the Modified Angoff method with (n=19), and without (n=19) item data available to judges. The Angoff method required free response percentage estimates (0-100) percent,…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Comparative Analysis, Criterion Referenced Tests, Cutting Scores


