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Peer reviewedLevinson, Cynthia Y. – Educational Leadership, 2000
Across five continents, operant testing schemes are the assessment equivalent of an English jumble sale. Test types, rationales, preparation times, and scoring practices are equally diverse in Australia, Brazil, Canada, the Czech Republic, England, Germany, Israel, and Japan. Most systems are in flux or under scrutiny. (MLH)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, National Competency Tests
Peer reviewedWallace, Dale – Educational Leadership, 2000
Given the amount of time, energy, and money devoted to provincial achievement exams in Canada, it is disturbing that Alberta students and teachers feel so pressured and that the exams do not accurately reflect what students know. Research shows that intelligence has an (untested) emotional component. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Achievement Tests, Cheating, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewedTaleporos, Elizabeth – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 1998
Two achievement testing programs in New York City that have had and are having some consequences are described, and how the school system tries to determine and deal with these consequences is explored. Cooperation and open dialog between test publishers and the school district are making it possible to deal with the real-life problems of test…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Educational Testing, Elementary Secondary Education, School Districts
Peer reviewedPearson, P. David; Vyas, Sapna; Sensale, Lisa M.; Kim, Youb – Clearing House, 2001
Describes why and how assessment and accountability can and have become destructive forces. Offers a historical perspective, and examines the crux of the problem: "polluted test scores." Offers examples from the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills test, and from Chicago's summer school program. Points to directions educators might take…
Descriptors: Accountability, Educational Change, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedHager, Paul; And Others – Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 1994
Concerns about and objections to competency-based assessment in higher education are examined, including superficiality, use of inference, neglect of knowledge and of process, and subjectivity. It is concluded that, although each objection raises an important issue, in each case, a well-designed competency-based assessment system can overcome…
Descriptors: College Students, Competency Based Education, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
Peer reviewedWatson, Patricia A.; Abel, Carolyn Davidson; Lacina, Jan Guidry; Alexander, Vi Cain; Mayo, Karen Embry – Language Arts, 2002
Describes how a group of Texas teacher educators use story to examine their teaching decisions in the face of a test-driven curriculum. Notes that their stories reflect their responses to pressures to create curriculum that imitates the test rather than remaining learner-centered. (SG)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, High Stakes Tests, Standardized Tests
Peer reviewedNelson, Janet S.; Jayanthi, Madhavi; Epstein, Michael H.; Bursuck, William D. – Remedial and Special Education, 2000
A study investigated the preferences of 158 middle school students with and without disabilities for specific adaptations in general education classroom testing. Open-notes and open-book tests were among the adaptations most preferred. Students with disabilities and/or students with low achievement indicated significantly higher preference than…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Inclusive Schools, Low Achievement, Middle School Students
Kohn, Alfie – School Administrator, 1999
By their very nature, grades undermine learning. In schools that constantly emphasize the importance of success, students may regard learning as a chore, avoid challenging tasks, think superficially, and value ability more than effort. Students should be able to think, write, and explore without worrying how good they are. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Grade Inflation, Grades (Scholastic), High Achievement
Peer reviewedGunderson, Lee; Siegel, Linda S. – Reading Teacher, 2001
Considers how IQ tests may not be an effective means of identifying English-as-a-second language (ESL) students with learning disabilities due to inherent cultural biases of the tests. Concludes that the use of IQ tests with ESL or English-dialect students is inappropriate when the student's first or primary language is different from the language…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English (Second Language), Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
Peer reviewedCrist, Patricia J.; Shafer, Gregory – English Journal, 2001
Considers special needs students' interactions with high stakes testing and ways in which teachers try to improve the testing environment. Makes a suggestion for different types of evaluations including a semester-ending project that permits choice and engages students in interdisciplinary lessons. (SG)
Descriptors: English Instruction, High Stakes Tests, Secondary Education, Special Needs Students
Marks, Anthony M.; Cronje, Johannes C. – Educational Technology & Society, 2008
Computer-based assessments are becoming more commonplace, perhaps as a necessity for faculty to cope with large class sizes. These tests often occur in large computer testing venues in which test security may be compromised. In an attempt to limit the likelihood of cheating in such venues, randomised presentation of items is automatically…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Educational Testing, Research Needs, Test Items
Carlson, Sybil B.; Ward, William C. – 1988
Issues concerning the cost and feasibility of using Formulating Hypotheses (FH) test item types for the Graduate Record Examinations have slowed research into their use. This project focused on two major issues that need to be addressed in considering FH items for operational use: the costs of scoring and the assignment of scores along a range of…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Costs, Pilot Projects
Preparing Students for Testing: Should We Promote Test Wiseness? EREAPA Publication Series No. 93-1.
Wheeler, Patricia H.; Haertel, Geneva D. – 1993
Test-taking skills and methods used to prepare students for taking an examination are independent of knowledge and skills in the content area being tested. Test-taking skills do not give students the correct answers, but do allow the student to concentrate on answering questions without being confused by the mechanics of the test. Students who…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Ethics, Higher Education, Interpersonal Relationship
Mislevy, Robert J. – 1992
A closed form approximation is given for the variance of examinee proficiency estimates in the Rasch model for dichotomous items, under the condition that only estimates, rather than true values, of item difficulty parameters are available. The term that must be added to the usual response-sampling variance is inversely proportional to both the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Equations (Mathematics), Estimation (Mathematics)
Kane, Michael T. – 1992
Valid assessment of professional competence has proven to be an elusive goal. Objective tests, direct observation of performance, overall ratings of competence, and simulations have been tried and found wanting in one way or another. Objective test items are criticized as being unrealistic and therefore invalid. Direct observation tends to be very…
Descriptors: Competence, Objective Tests, Observation, Performance Tests

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