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Moore, Mary Elizabeth Mullino – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2005
Recognizing the challenge of adequate evaluation in higher education, this essay introduces some of the critical, alternative-seeking conversation about educational measurement. The thesis is that knowledge, value, and meaning emerge in the relational dynamics of education, thus requiring complex approaches to evaluation, utilizing relational…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Assessment, Evaluation Criteria, Case Studies
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David, Smith, J.; Redford, Joshua S.; Gent, Lauren C.; Washburn, David A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
Categorization researchers typically present single objects to be categorized. But real-world categorization often involves object recognition within complex scenes. It is unknown how the processes of categorization stand up to visual complexity or why they fail facing it. The authors filled this research gap by blending the categorization and…
Descriptors: Classification, Recognition (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Visual Perception
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Heit, Evan; Hayes, Brett K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
V. M. Sloutsky and A. V. Fisher reported 5 experiments documenting relations among categorization, induction, recognition, and similarity in children as well as adults and proposed a new model of induction, SINC (similarity, induction, categorization). Those authors concluded that induction depends on perceptual similarity rather than conceptual…
Descriptors: Classification, Logical Thinking, Recognition (Psychology), Perception
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Hertwig, Ralph; Pachur, Thorsten; Kurzenhauser, Stephanie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
How do people judge which of 2 risks claims more lives per year? The authors specified 4 candidate mechanisms and tested them against people's judgments in 3 risk environments. Two mechanisms, availability by recall and regressed frequency, conformed best to people's choices. The same mechanisms also accounted well for the mapping accuracy of…
Descriptors: Inferences, Information Processing, Incentives, Cognitive Processes
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Segall, Daniel O. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2004
A new sharing item response theory (SIRT) model is presented that explicitly models the effects of sharing item content between informants and test takers. This model is used to construct adaptive item selection and scoring rules that provide increased precision and reduced score gains in instances where sharing occurs. The adaptive item selection…
Descriptors: Scoring, Item Analysis, Item Response Theory, Adaptive Testing
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Tong, Ye; Kolen, Michael – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2005
The performance of three equating methods--the presmoothed equipercentile method, the item response theory (IRT) true score method, and the IRT observed score method--were examined based on three equating criteria: the same distributions property, the first-order equity property, and the second-order equity property. The magnitude of the…
Descriptors: True Scores, Criteria, Raw Scores, Item Response Theory
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Hartung, Paul J.; Taber, Brian J.; Richard, George V. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2005
Measures of values typically appraise the construct globally, across life domains or relative to a broad life domain such as work. We conducted two studies to construct and initially validate an occupation- and context-specific values measure. Study 1, based on a sample of 192 medical students, describes the initial construction and item analysis…
Descriptors: Values, Measures (Individuals), Medical Students, Career Choice
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Munson, Benjamin; Kurtz, Beth A.; Windsor, Jennifer – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
Research has shown that children repeat high-probability phoneme sequences more accurately than low-probability ones. This effect attenuates with age, and its decrease is predicted by developmental changes in the size of the lexicon (J. Edwards, M. E. Beckman, & B. Munson, 2004; B. Munson, 2001; B. Munson, J. Edwards, & M. Beckman, 2005). This…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Phonology, Children, Language Impairments
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Nakata, Tatsuya – ReCALL, 2008
The spacing effect is known to be one of the most robust phenomena in experimental psychology, and many attempts have been made to realize effective spaced learning for L2 vocabulary learning. This study compares vocabulary learning with word lists, word cards, and computers in order to identify which material leads to the most superior spaced…
Descriptors: Word Lists, Item Analysis, Correlation, Vocabulary Development
Niemi, David; Vallone, Julia; Wang, Jia; Griffin, Noelle – National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST), 2007
Many districts and schools across the U. S. have begun to develop and administer assessments to complement state testing systems and provide additional information to monitor curriculum, instruction and schools. In advance of this trend, the Jackson Public Schools (JPS) district has had a district benchmark testing system in place for many years.…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Testing Programs, Educational Testing, Item Analysis
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Osta, Iman – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2007
This research aimed at developing a methodological framework to investigate the alignment of the Lebanese national math exam tests with the curriculum at the middle school level, during the transitory period of a major curricular reform. The focus is on exploring the characteristics of an "assessment culture" set by the national exams…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Testing, Content Validity, Item Analysis
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DiStefano, Christine A.; Kamphaus, Randy W. – Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, 2007
The purpose of this study was to document the development of a short behavioral scale that could be used to assess preschoolers' behavior while still retaining adequate scale coverage, reliability, and validity. Factor analysis and item analysis techniques were applied to data from a nationally representative, normative database to create a…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Test Validity, Item Analysis, Factor Analysis
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Abbott, Marilyn L. – Language Learning, 2006
This study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that reading comprehension items, which elicit specific bottom-up and top-down strategies, favor certain linguistic/cultural groups. Verbal report data were collected from Arabic- and Mandarin-speaking English as a second language (ESL) learners to identify the reading strategies involved in…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Reading Strategies, Individual Differences
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Kim, Jee-Seon – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2006
Simulation and real data studies are used to investigate the value of modeling multiple-choice distractors on item response theory linking. Using the characteristic curve linking procedure for Bock's (1972) nominal response model presented by Kim and Hanson (2002), all-category linking (i.e., a linking based on all category characteristic curves…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Test Items, Item Response Theory, Simulation
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Plunkett, Kim; Bandelow, Stephan – Brain and Language, 2006
Computer modelling research has undermined the view that double dissociations in behaviour are sufficient to infer separability in the cognitive mechanisms underlying those behaviours. However, all these models employ "multi-modal" representational schemes, where functional specialisation of processing emerges from the training process.…
Descriptors: Information Processing, Cognitive Processes, Neuropsychology, Incidence
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