Item Analysis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 6
About This Presentation
Title:

Item Analysis

Description:

Item Response Theory (Latent Trait Analysis) links observed (manifest) ... 1. precisely measure the difficulty or easiness of each item ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:100
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 7
Provided by: lynnh9
Category:
Tags: analysis | item

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Item Analysis


1
Item Analysis
  • Differential Item Functioning (DIF) what is
    test bias?
  • Example item functioning on the Stanford-Binet
  • Item Response Theory (Latent Trait Analysis)
    links observed (manifest) variables that are
    actually measured to unobserved (latent)
    construct of interest educational attainment,
    disease severity, program effectiveness, etc.
  • What is the latent trait on the GRE?

2
What IRT can do
  • 1. precisely measure the difficulty or easiness
    of each item
  • 2. determine the association of each item with
    the construct being measured
  • 3. determine which items are biased
  • 4. design a test with the fewest items necessary
    to measure the construct create an adaptive
    test

3
Test Administration
  • Ethical Codes
  • Should someone know their IQ score?
  • Should anyone else?
  • least stigmatizing label changing fashions in
    terminology
  • Informed Consent
  • Origin of ethical codes Nuremberg Trials
    Tuskegee experiment
  • Tri-councils Ethical conduct for research
    involving humans
  • A world without research?

4
Following Test Directions
  • Why are test directions arbitrary and inflexible?
  • Consequences of flexibility
  • Is flexibility ever justified?
  • What is the overall tone of test
    administration? What cultural assumptions are
    made? Are standardized tests culturally loaded?
  • Can these factors make a difference?
  • Ex Head Start study

5
How to create a bogus test
  • 1. use inter-related items
  • 2. use specific determiners (words such as all,
    always, often, sometimes, and usually, which
    suggest that the statement is true)
  • 3. have more true than false items (70 of
    selections are true)
  • 4. limit variability of scores take advantage
    of ceiling and floor effects
  • 5. use obvious distractors

6
Testing and Individual Differences
  • Most tests are designed for the middle-range of
    ability
  • Out of level testing for exceptional samples
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com