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Assessment of Aptitude, Achievement,

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Title: Assessment of Aptitude, Achievement,


1
Assessment of Aptitude, Achievement, Learning
Disabilities
2
Aptitude Assessment
  • Purpose measure an examinees capacity for
    learning and to predict whether he or she would
    likely benefit from an educational or training
    program.
  • Applications
  • Academic Career Counseling.
  • Selection Placement Decisions.

3
American College Testing Program (ACT)
  • Academic Tests
  • English.
  • Math.
  • Reading.
  • Science Reasoning.
  • Standard Scores M 18 SD 6 (recent mean of
    college bound seniors 20-21)

4
Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
  • SAT I Reasoning Test, which includes
  • Verbal Mathematical Sections.
  • Standard Scores M 500 SD 100
  • SAT II Subject Tests (e.g., History), which are
    used for both admission decisions determining
    course placement.
  • Current examinees raw scores are compared to the
    raw scores obtained by the 1 million examinees
    who took the SAT in 1994. Previous examinees
    were compared to a 1941 standardization sample.

5
Do ACT/SAT Tests Really Predict Academic
Performance?
  • Technically, yes. But the relationship between
    aptitude test scores and college performance is
    only moderate.

6
Hypothetical Relationship between ACT Scores GPA
  • r .40
  • r2 .16
  • Y ACT(.073) 1.39
  • Example Given an ACT score of 20, we would
    predict a GPA of 2.85.

7
Validity of Admissions Tests for predicting
college performance
  • ACT SATI have equal validity for predicting
    college performance.
  • Prediction of Undergraduate GPA
  • SAT (r ? .36) v. HSR (r ? .42).
  • HSR SAT scores increases r to .50 to .60.
  • Prediction of graduation from college
  • SAT (r ? .33) v. HSR (r ? .29).
  • Validity coefficients are higher when
    researchers correct for GPA unreliability and
    restriction of range.

8
SAT I vs. SAT II(Geiser Studley, 2002)
  • N 77,893 CA students.
  • SAT-II scores were the best predictor of UGPA (r
    .25), followed by HSGPA (r .24), and SAT-I (r
    .18).
  • SAT I scores did not enhance the prediction of
    UGPA beyond that predictable by SAT II scores
    HSGPA.
  • The predictive validity of the SAT-II is less
    affected by SES than the SAT-I.

9
Benefits of ACT or SAT
  • Students are directly compared on the same
    standard or set of tasks.
  • These tests do have modest predictive validity (r
    .30 to .50).
  • Tests may identify underachievers who have the
    potential to succeed in college, but who did not
    do well in high school.

10
Problems with Alternative Criteria
  • Standards and grading policies vary from school
    to school (and teacher to teacher).
  • Total GPA does not reflect quality and difficulty
    of courses completed.
  • Curriculum differences across school systems.
  • Grade inflation and other leniency errors.
  • Nearly all letters of recommendation are
    laudatory and lack any predictive validity.

11
Graduate Admissions Tests
  • Graduate Record Examination (GRE) Verbal,
    Quantitative, Analytical Writing. Subjects
    tests are also available.
  • Standard Scores M 500 SD 100
  • Millers Analogies Test (MAT).
  • Medical College Admission Test (MCAT).
  • Law School Admissions Test (LSAT).
  • Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT).

12
Adaptive Testing
  • Selection of subsequent test items is based upon
    how well examinee performed on previous items
    requires fewer items because examinee is not
    given items that are too easy or too difficult
    typically the test items are administered by
    computer.

13
General Aptitude Tests
  • Purpose (1) identify an examinees specific
    strengths weaknesses and (2) match an examinee
    to specific jobs or training programs.
  • Examinees are assessed on several specific
    abilities, like mechanical reasoning, rather than
    a global attribute
  • Unlike tests like the ACT that measure scholastic
    aptitude, these inventories focus more on real
    world abilities.

14
Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB)
  • General Science
  • Arithmetic Reasoning
  • Word Knowledge
  • Paragraph Comprehension
  • Numerical Operations
  • Coding Speed
  • Auto Shop Information
  • Mathematics Knowledge
  • Mechanical Comprehension
  • Electronics Information

15
ONet (formerly General Aptitude Test Battery)
  • Verbal Abilities.
  • Arithmetic Reasoning.
  • Computation.
  • Spatial Ability.
  • Form Perception
  • Clerical Perception
  • Motor Coordination
  • Finder Dexterity
  • Manual Dexterity

16
Achievement Tests
  • Purpose asses what an examinee has already
    learned as a result of education or other
    training experiences.

17
Types of Achievement Tests
  • Survey Achievement Batteries monitor students
    progress on basic educational domains from year
    to year ex. TerraNova or the Iowa Tests of Basic
    Skills/Educational Development.
  • Individual Achievement Tests diagnostic
    evaluations ex. WIAT.
  • Criterion-Referenced Achievement Tests evaluate
    whether a examinee has mastered certain material
    or a given academic standard has been met (e.g.,
    high school graduation exams).
  • Specific Subject Tests for example, the exams
    you will take in this course.

18
Lake Wobegon Effect
  • Amazingly, most students and school districts
    score above average on norm-referenced
    achievement tests.
  • How can this occur?
  • Outdated norms students are performing better
    than older norm group.
  • Cheating by teachers.
  • Eliminating low-performing students from the test
    pool.

19
No Child Left Behind Act
  • Purpose increase the accountability of the
    public school system.
  • All students in grades 3-8 must be annually
    assessed in reading math.
  • States must develop standards objectives for
    educational achievement.

20
  • By the 2013-2014 school year, states must
    demonstrate that all of their students are
    proficient in basic academic skills.
  • School systems that fail to meet the new
    standards will be labeled as deficient students
    in these schools may have the option of
    transferring to a higher performing school.

21
Aptitude v. Achievement Tests
  • Aptitude
  • Purpose predict future performance.
  • Predictive Validity.
  • Evaluate more general competencies that may be
    innate or acquired in the distant past.
  • Achievement
  • Purpose assess current performance
  • Content Validity.
  • Evaluate more specific competencies that have
    been recently learned.

22
What is a Learning Disability?
  • Definition failure of an individual, despite
    adequate intelligence training, to master a
    certain academic skill (Sattler, 1998) or a
    severe discrepancy between IQ achievement
  • Disabilities are believed to result from problems
    in the central nervous system (i.e., information
    processing problems).
  • Need to rule out other explanations for low
    achievement, such as hearing impairments or
    emotional disturbance.
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