401 Final

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Which of the following is the most often misinterpreted score-interpretation indicator used with standardized tests? a)Grade-equivalent score b)Percentile c)Stanine d)Raw score

a)Grade-equivalent score

A substantial number of educators regard affective curricular aims as being equal in importance to cognitive curricular aims—​or, ​possibly, of even greater importance. a) True b) False

a) True

For an affective​ self-report inventory, very young students can be asked to reply to simple statements —sometimes presented orally—by the use of only two or three​ agreement-options per statement. a) True b) False

a) True

Generally​ speaking, teachers can make defensible decisions about the impact of affectively oriented instruction by arriving at​ group-focused inferences regarding their​ students' affective status prior to and following that instruction. a) True b) False

a) True

Most teachers want their​ students, at the close of an instructional​ period, to exhibit​ subject-approaching tendencies​ (that is, an interest in the subject being​ taught) equal to or greater than the​ subject-approaching tendencies those students displayed at the beginning of instruction. a) True b) False

a) True

Multifocus​ self-report affective inventories typically contain far fewer items related to each affective variable being measured than do traditional Likert inventories. a) True b) False

a) True

One of the more difficult decisions to be faced when constructing a multifocus​ self-report affective inventory is arriving at a response to the following​ question: How many items are needed for each affective variable being​ measured? a) True b) False

a) True

When teachers administer an affective assessment to their students early in an instructional program and intend to administer the same or a similar assessment to their students​ later, the assessments often have a substantial impact on the​ teacher's instruction. a) True b) False

a) True

Whenever​ self-report inventories are employed to measure​ students' affective​ dispositions, students' perceptions that their responses are anonymous are typically far more important than is​ "actual" anonymity. a) True b) False

a) True

Whereas most cognitively oriented classroom assessments attempt to measure​ students' optimal​ performances, affectively oriented classroom assessments attempt to get an accurate fix on​ students' typical dispositions. a) True b) False

a) True

​Students' affect is most often measured in school because evidence of​ students' affect is believed to help predict how students are apt to behave in particular ways later—when those​ students' educations have been concluded. a) True b) False

a) True

About a month into the new school​ year, high school teacher Rodney Gardner used a​ 25-item multiple-choice test to measure how well students had mastered a rather large array of factual information about key events in U.S. history. He calculated the p​-value for each of the​ test's 25​ four-option items, and he was relatively pleased when the average p​-value for the entire set of 25 items was .56. Much later in the​ year, with the same​ class, he tried out another assessment tactic with a​ brand-new test consisting of 40​ true/false items. When he calculated p​-values for each of the 40​ items, he was gratified to discover that the average p​-value was .73. Mr. Gardner concluded that because of the p​-value ​"bump" of​ .17, his​ students' learning had increased substantially. Please select from the four choices below the statement that most accurately describes Mr.​ Gardner's interpretation of his​ students' test results. a)A serious flaw in Mr.​ Gardner's conclusion about his​ students' hypothetical improved learning is that the increase in p value is a univariate result of student learning. b)Mr.​ Gardner's interpretation of substantially increased student learning is erroneous because p​-values are solely indicative of the proportion of correct answers produced in response to particular test​ items, hence such p​-values are almost completely unrelated to the degree of​ students' learning. c)Regrettably, Mr.​ Gardner's interpretation was clearly in error because when comparing​ students' performances on different​ tests, it is customary to use​ students' average raw scores rather than p​-values, so the p​-value comparison he made is likely to be misleading. d)Mr.​ Gardner's interpretation of a​ "bump" in student learning is mistaken because lower p​-values are indicative of more difficult​ items, so Mr.​ Gardner's multiple-choice exam early in the school year contained more difficult items than the​ binary-choice exam he administered later in the school year.

a)A serious flaw in Mr.​ Gardner's conclusion about his​ students' hypothetical improved learning is that the increase in p value is a univariate result of student learning.

Which of the following is an instructionally beneficial rubric? a)A skill-focused rubric b)A task-specific rubric c)A hypergeneral rubric d)None of the above

a)A skill-focused rubric

Mr. McMillan was busy assigning grades to his​ sixth-grader's science fair projects. One of his start​ students, Darren, submitted an excellent project.​ However, Mr. McMillan felt the project​ didn't represent the full extent of​ Darren's potential, so he gave Darren a B. What type of grading is Mr. McMillan​ applying? a)Aptitude-based grading b)Absolute grading c)Relative grading d)None of these is correct

a)Aptitude-based grading

The teaching staff in a suburban middle school is concerned with the quality of their​ school's teacher-made classroom assessments. This issue has arisen because the district school board has directed all schools to install a​ teacher-evaluation process featuring prominently weighted evidence of​ students' learningas measured chiefly by​ teacher-made tests. The district office requires teachers to submit all​ students' responses from each classroom assessment immediately after those assessments have been administered.​ Then, in less than 2 weeks after​ submission, teachers receive descriptive statistics for each test​ (such as​ students' means and standard​ deviations). Teachers also receive an internal consistency reliability coefficient for the total test and a p​-value and an​ item-discrimination index for each item. Teachers then must personally judge the quality of their own​ tests' items. The​ teachers' reviews of their​ test's individual items are seen as subjective by almost everyone​ involved, whereas the empirical evidence of item quality is regarded as objective. The​ school's faculty unanimously decides to weight​ teachers' own​ per-item judgments at 25 percent while weighting the statistical​ per-item p​-values and​ item-discrimination indices at 75 percent. Please select the statement that most accurately characterizes the​ test-improvement procedures in this suburban middle school. a)Because the relevance of traditional​ item-quality indicators, such as those supplied by this​ school's district​ office, can vary depending on the specific use to which a​ teacher-made test will be​ put, the​ across-the-board weightings​ (25 percent​ judgmental; 75 percent​ empirical) may be inappropriate for the proposed​ teacher-evaluation process. b)The teaching​ staff's unanimous judgment about the relative​ per-item weightings of​ teachers' judgments and​ per-item empirical indicators is essentially backward - and should have been 75 percent weighting of judgmental evidence and 25 percent evidence for empirical evidence. c)Because of the imprecision of both judgmental and empirical indicators of an​ item's quality, the only truly defensible weightings of those two categories of​ item-quality evidence should be​ identical, with 50 percent for empirical indicators and 50 percent for judgmental indicators. d)Once a differential​ per-item weighting contrast has been decided on for judgmental and empirical indicators of​ items' quality, that difference must remain constant for all items involved in a​ test-improvement effort.

a)Because the relevance of traditional​ item-quality indicators, such as those supplied by this​ school's district​ office, can vary depending on the specific use to which a​ teacher-made test will be​ put, the​ across-the-board weightings​ (25 percent​ judgmental; 75 percent​ empirical) may be inappropriate for the proposed​ teacher-evaluation process.

Which of the following steps is not one that should be followed in the creation of a multifocus affective inventory for use in classroom assessment? a)Create a series of exclusively positive statements related to each affective variable selected. b)Determine the number and phrasing of students' response options. c)Select the affective variables to measure. d)Decide on how many items to use in measuring each variable.

a)Create a series of exclusively positive statements related to each affective variable selected.

Mr. Ramirez administered an instructionally diagnostic test to his students in order to better understand how to proceed in his teaching of fractions. The diagnostic test he administered took him nearly three days to​ score, thus countering its practical usefulness. Which attribute of an instructionally diagnostic test did this test​ violate? a)Ease of usage b)Item quality c)Curricular alignment d)Sufficiency of items

a)Ease of usage

Which is not a factor around which teachers should structure the evaluation of the quality of their​ instruction? a)Evidence constructed exclusively from classroom observations b)Assessment evidence collected via classrooms assessments c)Evidence pertaining to any positive or negative side effects d)Assessment evidence collected via accountability tests

a)Evidence constructed exclusively from classroom observations

Ms. Cooke computed some basic descriptive statistics for each of her two Algebra I classes. Her first period class had a standard deviation of 7.6. Her second period class had a standard deviation of 4.5. Which class has a greater variability in test scores and how do you​ know? a)First period has a greater variability because the standard deviation of 7.6 is larger than the standard deviation of 4.5. b)There is not enough information given to make this determination. c)Second period has a greater variability because the standard deviation of 4.5 is smaller than the standard deviation of 7.6. d)The standard deviation is not the proper statistic for determining variability.

a)First period has a greater variability because the standard deviation of 7.6 is larger than the standard deviation of 4.5.

Which best describes the two types of evaluation processes under which teachers are routinely​ evaluated? a)Formative and summative evaluations b)Summative and instructional evaluations c)Formative and instructional evaluations d)None of the provided answer choices is correct

a)Formative and summative evaluations

Consider the three statements. Which are considered characteristics of portfolio​ assessments? I. Represents the range of reading and writing students are engaged in II. Engages students in assessing their progress​ and/or accomplishments and establishing ongoing learning goals III. Mechanically scored or scored by teachers who have little input a)I and II b)III only c)II only d)I, II, and III

a)I and II

Which of the following contentions about affective assessment in the classroom is not accurate? a)If classroom affective assessment is introduced, it substantially diminishes the attention given to the measurement of higher-level cognitive outcomes. b)Anonymity enhancement procedures for classroom affective assessment are extremely desirable. c)Classroom affective assessment typically focuses a teacher's instructional concerns more directly on the promotion of affective objectives for students. d)If affective assessment is to take place in classrooms, many teachers will need to learn about affect-focused instructional techniques.

a)If classroom affective assessment is introduced, it substantially diminishes the attention given to the measurement of higher-level cognitive outcomes.

Which of the following is not one of the five review criteria for judgmentally based improvement procedures listed in Chapter​ 11? a)Item's ease of grading b)Accuracy of content c)Contribution to​ score-based inference d)Fairness

a)Item's ease of grading

Which of the following is the most troublesome problem facing those educators who wish to rely heavily on the use of performance tests? a)Making valid inferences about students' generalized skill-mastery b)Generating tasks for performance tests c)Persuading students to respond seriously to a performance test's task(s) d)Scoring students' responses to a performance test's task(s)

a)Making valid inferences about students' generalized skill-mastery

Ms. Troy is the principal of Sunnyside Elementary School. In order to evaluate one of her​ first-grade teachers, Mrs.​ Stelter, Ms. Troy sits down and observes a​ 30-minute lesson. At the conclusion of the​ lesson, Ms. Troy concludes that Ms. Stelter is an impactful teacher. What is the main issue with Ms.​ Troy's evaluation​ process? a)Ms. Troy has not collected any outcome data. b)There is no problem with Ms.​ Troy's process or conclusion. c)Ms. Troy needs to observe Ms. Stelter for more than one day. d)Ms. Troy needs to observe Ms. Stelter for longer than 30 minutes.

a)Ms. Troy has not collected any outcome data.

Consider the three statements. Which are considered characteristics of portfolio​ assessments? I. Assesses all students on the same dimensions. II. Addresses achievement only. III. Separates​ learning, testing, and teaching. a)None of these represent characteristics of portfolio assessment. b)I and III c)I only d)I and II

a)None of these represent characteristics of portfolio assessment.

Which term represents the number of items that a student has answered correctly on an​ assessment? a)Raw score b)Mean c)Median d)Range

a)Raw score

Mrs. Kate administered a test on the scientific method to her 10th grade Biology students. When Mrs.​ Kate's administrator reviewed her assigned grades on the test he noticed that the grades represented a normal distribution. When he asked​ why, Mrs. Kate​ said, "The students who performed best in the class received the highest grades and then grades were distributed normally based on class​ performance." What type of grading is Mrs. Kate​ describing? a)Relative grading b)Absolute grading c)Aptitude-based grading d)None of these is correct

a)Relative grading

Scale scores are converted raw scores that use a​ new, arbitrarily chosen scale to represent levels of achievement or ability. What is one clear advantage of a scale​ score? a)Scale scores allow for the comparison of several equidifficult forms of a test. b)Scale scores are easier to read than raw scores. c)Scale scores are more accurate than raw scores. d)None of these represent an advantage of scale scores.

a)Scale scores allow for the comparison of several equidifficult forms of a test.

Mr. Miller has decided to incorporate a​ pretest/posttest design to his classroom evaluation procedures in order to gather better classroom data to guide his instruction. He created two equidifficult forms of the test he plans to​ use, divided his class in​ half, and administered one of the two forms to each half of his class. He then administered the opposite version of the test to each different half.​ So, in the​ end, each half of the class had taken both tests. What type of testing design is Mr. Miller​ following? a)Split-and-switch design b)Blind-scoring design c)Pretest - posttest design d)None of these answer choices is correct.

a)Split-and-switch design

Which of the following is not a reason that should dissuade policymakers from evaluating educational quality on the basis of students' scores on certain educational achievement tests? a)Substantial gaps between minority and majority students' performance on most accountability tests will rarely be found. b)There are often substantial mismatches between the content covered on some of these tests and local curricular emphases. c)It is difficult to tell from such tests how much of a student's test performance is due to what was taught in school rather than to students' socioeconomic status or inherited academic aptitudes. d)There is a technical tendency to remove from such tests items covering important, teacher-stressed knowledge and skills.

a)Substantial gaps between minority and majority students' performance on most accountability tests will rarely be found.

Which of the following is the most accurate in regards to grading student​ effort? a)There is no​ clear, commonly​ defined, approach to evaluating student effort and therefore effort cannot be graded. b)Effort contains a common definition that makes it easy to grade. c)Effort is an important factor that should be calculated routinely. d)None of these answer choices is correct.

a)There is no​ clear, commonly​ defined, approach to evaluating student effort and therefore effort cannot be graded.

The only acceptable response options presented to a student who must complete a​ self-report affective inventory containing statements about the same topic should be the​ following: Strongly​ Agree, Agree,​ Uncertain, Disagree, Strongly Disagree. a) True b) False

b) False

The vast majority of educators think revealing to students the nature of a​ teacher's affective curricular aims—at the outset of instruction—is an instructionally sensible action to take. a) True b) False

b) False

Because there is a statewide reading comprehension test that must be passed by all​ high-school students before they receive​ state-sanctioned diplomas, Mr.​ Gillette, a​ 10th-grade English​ teacher, spends about four weeks of his regular class sessions getting students ready to pass standardized tests. He devotes one week to each of the following​ topics: (1) time management in​ examinations, (2) dealing with​ test-induced anxiety,​ (3) making calculated​ guesses, and​ (4) trying to think like the​ test's item writers. Mr.​ Gillette's students seem appreciative of his efforts. Mr.​ Gillette's activities constitute​ ________. a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline

Which of the following indices is most commonly used to represent an item's difficulty? a)p value b)Correlation coefficient c)Distractor efficiency d)Discrimination index

a)p value

Analytic scoring is better than holistic scoring when an educator is trying to​ _________. a)provide diagnostic feedback to students b)remove sources of unreliability c)increase the efficiency of scoring d)increase overall validity

a)provide diagnostic feedback to students

When assessing the affective dispositions of a group of students by using a​ self-report inventory, it is obligatory to employ a Likert inventory as similar as possible to the inventories introduced by Rensis Likert in 1932. a) True b) False

b) False

When anonymously completed​ self-report inventories are being used in an attempt to assess​ students' affect, if some students respond too positively​ and, at the same​ time, some students respond too​ negatively, teachers simply cannot draw valid​ group-focused inferences about​ students' affective status. a) True b) Fasle

b) Fasle

In a normal​ distribution, approximately what percentage of test scores would fall within two standard deviations above the​ mean? a)50 percent b)2 percent c)10 percent d)15 percent

b)2 percent

A​ teacher's challenge in reducing​ students' tendency to supply socially desirable answers on a​ self-report inventory is identical to the challenge in reducing​ students' socially desirable responses to the items on a cognitive test. a) True b) False

b) False

If a teacher sets out to bring about changes in​ students' values, he or she needs to select as a curricular aim the promotion of only those values that are supported by more than 50 percent of the​ students' parents and at least half of the general citizenry of the state in which the​ teacher's school is located. a) True b) False

b) False

If respondents who are completing an affective​ self-report inventory​ that's presented by a computer are informed at the outset that their responses will be​ anonymous, it can be safely assumed that almost all students will believe their responses to be truly anonymous. a) True b) False

b) False

The greater the educational significance that a teacher attributes to the pursuit of affective curricular​ aims, the more acceptable it is for the teacher to use​ students' self-report responses not only to arrive at affectively focused inferences about groups of students but also to make inferences about particular​ student's affective status. a) True b) False

b) False

Suppose a group of test scores forms a perfectly normal distribution. Approximately what percentage of test scores will fall within one standard deviation of the​ mean? a)100 percent b)66 percent c)25 percent d)33 percent

b)66 percent

Which type of instructionally diagnostic tests are most commonly found in special​ education? a)Instruction-oriented b)Classification-focused c)Standardized diagnostic tests d)None of these are commonly found in special education

b)Classification-focused

Which of the following is not one of the five rules for rubrics outlined in Chapter​ 8? a)Make certain that all the​ rubric's evaluative criteria can be addressed instructionally b)Employ as many evaluative criteria as possible c)Provide a succinct label for each evaluative criteria d)Make sure the skill to be assessed is significant

b)Employ as many evaluative criteria as possible

Which of the following rules is not one that is recommended when creating a scoring rubric that will have a positive impact on classroom instruction? a)Make certain the skill to be assessed is truly significant. b)Employ as many evaluative criteria as possible to judge major aspects of students' responses. c)Provide a terse label for each of the rubric's evaluative criteria. d)Be sure that all of the rubric's evaluative criteria can be addressed instructionally by teachers.

b)Employ as many evaluative criteria as possible to judge major aspects of students' responses.

Which of the following is not one of the four described steps in the development of a​ goal-attainment approach to​ grading? a)Choosing​ goal-attainment evidence b)Ensuring that grading criteria are kept private for security purposes c)Arriving at a final​ goal-attainment grade d)Clarifying curricular aims

b)Ensuring that grading criteria are kept private for security purposes

The difficulties stemming from the presence of​ "social desirability's" contamination of​ students' responses can be effectively addressed by informing students in the initial directions that they are to identify themselves only after responding to all items. a)True b)False

b)False

To provide a more complete picture of​ students' current affective​ status, it is sensible to ask students to supplement their anonymous responses to a​ self-report inventory by adding​ optional, unsigned explanatory comments if they wish to do so. a)True b)False

b)False

A​ first-year classroom​ teacher, George​ Jenkins, has just finished preparing the initial set of three classroom tests he intends to use with his​ fifth-grade students early in the school year​ (one test each in​ mathematics, language​ arts, and social​ studies). In an effort to improve those​ tests, he has​ e-mailed a draft version of the three tests to his​ mother, who provided continuing support for George while he completed his​ teacher-education coursework as well as a​ semester-long student teaching experience. He asks his mother to suggest improvements that he might make in the​ early-version tests. Which best describes​ George's effort to enhance the quality of his​ tests? a)George probably chose the best source of improvement advice for his draft​ tests, but he should have provided his mother with more specific guidelines regarding what she should be looking for as she reviews his​ tests' items. b)George could probably have secured better advice about his draft tests had he solicited it from his​ school's teachers and from his​ fifth-grade students before they took the tests. c)Although​ George's mother might have some useful suggestions regarding the quality of his​ early-version tests, a novice teacher such as George can almost always get the best instruction​ and/or assessment advice from his​ school's principal - so he should head to the school office for​ test-related suggestions. d)In addition to his own review​ (and, if​ necessary, editing) of the three draft tests - carried out at least a few days after having written them - George should seek critiques from his fellow elementary school teachers​ and, after his students have finished the​ tests, from those students as well.

b)George could probably have secured better advice about his draft tests had he solicited it from his​ school's teachers and from his​ fifth-grade students before they took the tests.

Sue​ Philips, a health education teacher in a large urban middle​ school, has recently begun analyzing her​ selected-response classroom tests using empirical data from​ students' current performances on those tests. She has acquired a simplified​ test-analysis program from her​ district's administrators and applies the program on her own laptop computer. She tries to base​ students' grades chiefly on their test scores and hopes to find that her items display​ item-discrimination indices below .20. A recent analysis of items from one of her major classroom tests indicated that three items were negative discriminators. Sue was elated. Please select the statement that most accurately describes​ Sue's test-improvement understanding. a)Sue's elation with the three negatively discriminating items was warranted because items that are genuinely capable of negative discriminations can accurately unearth otherwise hidden​ item-construction flaws. b)Given​ Sue's use of​ students' test performances to assign​ grades, her understanding of​ item-discrimination indices is​ confused—actually, her items should be yielding strong positive indices rather than low or negative indices. c)Sue should have been relying on her test​ items' p​-values to spot discrimination disparities in those​ items' ability to differentiate between the most and least knowledgeable students. d)Sue should not have used her current​ students' test performances to determine indicators of item​ quality—past students' performances represent more typical reflections of​ students' abilities.

b)Given​ Sue's use of​ students' test performances to assign​ grades, her understanding of​ item-discrimination indices is​ confused—actually, her items should be yielding strong positive indices rather than low or negative indices.

Engaging in assessment improvement is a natural part of the teaching process.​ However, sometimes reviewing your​ self-created materials alone can prove problematic. Which represents a reasonable explanation of why​ self-review can be​ problematic? a)Since you created the​ assessment, it​ isn't possible for you to critique it. b)If you created the​ assessment, you are prone to be biased in its favor. c)Teachers should play no part in reviewing their own assessments. This should be left to the help of colleagues and other professionals. d)You may be the expert in your​ content, but​ you're not an expert in assessment.

b)If you created the​ assessment, you are prone to be biased in its favor.

Which represents an accurate description of a performance​ assessment? a)An approach to measuring a​ student's status based solely on accuracy of response. b)An approach to measuring a​ student's status through their performance on predominately​ binary-choice items. c)An approach to measuring a​ student's status based on the way the student completes a specified task. d)An approach to measuring a​ student's status based on a combination of binary and​ multiple-choice items.

c)An approach to measuring a​ student's status based on the way the student completes a specified task.

Joshua Jenkins teaches a particularly popular​ high-enrollment series of American government courses in a large suburban high school. He has recently been tinkering with the​ multiple-choice exams he gives to his students because he wants to select the very best students to take part in an upcoming​ off-campus community project. He carries out a distractor analysis for one​ exam, given at the end of a​ 6-week unit on U.S. politics. He uses the data from the two largest of his four American government classes. After reviewing the distractor analysis data for item​ 27, Joshua decides to continue using the item in his exam covering the U.S. politics unit. Distractor Analysis Table Response Options Item No. 27 a)Joshua's decision to retain the item was correct - chiefly because all five​ multiple-choice options were chosen by one or more of his students in both the high​ total-test scorers and the low​ total-test scorers. b)Joshua erred in deciding to retain the item​ because, in order to make the intended​ norm-referenced interpretations about his​ students, the discrimination index of .15 is too low. c)Joshua wisely decided to retain the item because more students in the​ high-scoring group chose the correct answer than did students in the​ low-scoring group. d)Joshua's decision to retain the item was mistaken because of the​ item's atypically low p​-value.

b)Joshua erred in deciding to retain the item​ because, in order to make the intended​ norm-referenced interpretations about his​ students, the discrimination index of .15 is too low.

Which of the following is not a common flaw when scoring performance​ assessments? a)Teachers' personal-bias errors b)Lack of scorer familiarity with the totality of the content being assessed c)Scoring-instrument flaws d)Procedural flaws

b)Lack of scorer familiarity with the totality of the content being assessed

Which characteristic would not be considered a quality of an item that would cause the item to be instructionally​ insensitive? a)Alignment leniency b)Length of item c)Socioeconomic status links d)Excessive difficulty

b)Length of item

Consider the following set of factors that could be employed to judge the quality of the tasks for performance tests. Which one is not generally endorsed as a task-selection factor? a)Feasibility of implementation b)Motivational impact on students c)Authenticity d)Teachability of the skill assessed by a task

b)Motivational impact on students

For tests intended to provide norm-referenced interpretations, which of the following kinds of items should be sought? a)Negative discriminators b)Positive discriminators c)Nondiscriminators d)None of the above

b)Positive discriminators

Which of the following is not one of the attributes of concern for an instructionally diagnostic​ test? a)Curricular alignment b)Simplicity of content c)Ease of usage d)Item quality

b)Simplicity of content

Mr. Byron is concerned about his​ students' end of year test scores. In his​ state, student test data are compared across years. For​ example, his​ students' scores on last​ year's exam were taken into account so that this​ year, students who scored similarly last year can be compared to one another this year. The comparisons are reported in percentiles such​ as, "Addy scored as well or better than 95 percent of her peers who took this assessment and who scored at the same scale score last​ year." What type of approach to evaluation is being​ described? a)Scale score comparisons b)Student growth percentile c)Pretest - posttest design d)None of these is correct

b)Student growth percentile

When considering the clarification of curricular​ aims, what two groups of stakeholders should be the​ teacher's focus? a)Students and administrators b)Students and parents c)Parents and administrators d)None of these is correct

b)Students and parents

Which one of the following statements regarding the improvement of classroom assessments is not accurate? a)Performance-based approaches to item improvement usually are different for tests aimed at criterion-referenced inferences than for those aimed at norm-referenced inferences. b)Students' reactions to test items should play little or no role in item improvement. c)Classroom teachers can employ judgmental improvement procedures, empirical procedures, or both. d)For selected-response tests, especially multiple-choice items, distractor analyses can prove useful in item-improvement.

b)Students' reactions to test items should play little or no role in item improvement.

If classroom teachers set out to improve their own tests using judgmental approaches, which of the following review criteria is not a factor teachers ought to consider? a)Absence of any significant gaps in a test's content coverage b)The likelihood that, if a test is seen by parents, those parents will recognize the suitability of an item's content coverage c)Adherence to item-specific guidelines and general item-writing rules d)Each item's likely contribution to a valid score-based inference about a student's status

b)The likelihood that, if a test is seen by parents, those parents will recognize the suitability of an item's content coverage

Given your reading of Chapter​ 9, which would you anticipate being a major obstacle to the effective use of​ portfolios? a)They are unpopular with students. b)They are labor intensive. c)They include only examples of a​ student's best work. d)They frequently involve student collaboration.

b)They are labor intensive.

When considering instructionally diagnostic​ tests, at least how many strengths and weaknesses should be​ addressed? a)There is no minimum. b)Two c)One d)Three

b)Two

Which of the following phrases is most commonly used to describe a portfolio focused on a student's self-evaluative and ongoing improvement in the quality of work products? a)Formative portfolio b)Working portfolio c)Summative portfolio d)Showcase portfolio

b)Working portfolio

Fred Phillips prepares his​ sixth-grade social studies students to do well on a​ state-administered social studies examination by having all of his students take part in practice exercises using test items similar to those found on the state examination. Fred tries to replicate the nature of the state​ examination's items without ever using exactly the same content as it is apt to appear on the examination. He weaves his​ test-preparation activities into his regular social studies instruction so cleverly that most students really​ don't know they are receiving​ examination-related preparation. Fred​ Phillips' activities constitute​ _________. a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline

Srijati is eager to have her​ fourth-grade students become better​ "close readers"—that​ is, to be better able to read written materials carefully so that they are capable​ of, as Srijati​ says, "sucking all of the meaning out of what they​ read." Because of reductions in assessment​ funds, Srijati's school district has been obliged to eliminate all​ constructed-response items assessing​ students' reading comprehension. All items measuring​ students' reading​ comprehension, therefore, must be​ selected-response types of items​ and, beyond​ that, district officials have indicated that only three specific item types will be used in​ district-developed reading tests. So that her students will perform optimally on the​ district-developed reading​ tests, Srijati provides​ "close-reading practice" based exclusively on the three​ district-approved ways for students to display their reading comprehension.​ Srijati's fourth-graders really shine when it is time to take the district reading tests. ​Srijati's activities constitute​ _______. a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline

Instructionally diagnostic tests are generally designed to yield informative results regarding​ _____________________. a)subgroups of students b)individual students c)large groups of students d)None of these is correct.

b)individual students

A rubric is a scoring guide to be employed in judging students' responses to constructed-response assessments such as a performance test. Which one of the following elements is the least necessary feature of a properly constructed rubric? a)An identification of the evaluative criteria to be used in appraising a student's response b)Descriptions of different quality levels associated with each evaluative criterion c)A designation of a performance standard required for skill-mastery d)An indication of whether a holistic or analytic scoring approach is to be used

c)A designation of a performance standard required for skill-mastery

Mr. Cory has established a set of guidelines for grading his​ ninth-grade students' English essays. He was quite​ pleased, because as he graded the essays he realized that almost 95 percent of the class earned an A. Which type of grading is most likely being​ described? a)Aptitude-based grading b)Relative grading c)Absolute grading d)None of these is correct

c)Absolute grading

Anita Gonzales teaches​ middle-school English courses. At least half of her classroom tests call for students to author original compositions. Her other tests are typically composed of​ selected-response items. Anita has recently committed herself to the improvement of these​ selected-response tests, so when she distributes those tests to her​ students, she also supplies an​ item-improvement questionnaire to each student. The questionnaire asks students as they complete their tests to identify any items that they regard as​ (1) confusing,​ (2) having multiple correct​ answers, (3) having no correct​ answers, or​ (4) containing unfamiliar vocabulary terms. Students are to turn in their questionnaires along with their completed​ tests, but are given the option of turning in the questionnaires anonymously or not. Which statement most accurately portrays​ Anita's test-improvement​ procedures? a)Anita should make sure to have her students put their names on the​ item-improvement questionnaires so that she can identify which items were criticized by which students - then discount​ students' criticisms of any items that a complaining student had answered incorrectly. b)Instead of combining​ students' reactions to the items on the tests in a single​ item-improvement questionnaire, Anita should have developed and distributed four separate questionnaires - one for each of the four potential deficits in the items. c)Although seeking​ students' judgments regarding her tests has much to commend​ it, Anita should have sought​ students' reactions to a test only after they had completed it - by distributing blank copies of the test along with the​ item-improvement questionnaire. d)Because flawed​ test-directions often distort​ students' responses to​ selected-response tests' items and because​ Anita's own​ test-directions might be seriously​ defective, she should have asked her students to evaluate only the directions for her​ tests, not the​ tests' actual items.

c)Although seeking​ students' judgments regarding her tests has much to commend​ it, Anita should have sought​ students' reactions to a test only after they had completed it - by distributing blank copies of the test along with the​ item-improvement questionnaire.

During last​ year's end-of-school evaluation​ conference, Jessica​ Jones, a​ high-school social studies​ teacher, was told by the principal that her classroom tests were​ "haphazard at​ best." Jessica now intends to systematically review each of the classroom tests she​ builds, based on her​ principal's suggestions. She intends to personally evaluate each test on the basis of​ (1) its likely contribution to a valid​ test-based inference,​ (2) the accuracy of its​ content, (3) the absence of any important content​ omissions, and​ (4) the​ test's fundamental fairness. Which option represents the best appraisal of​ Jessica's test-review​ plans? a)Jessica's four evaluative criteria not only represent useful factors for teachers to employ when carrying out their own​ test-review efforts, but these four evaluative criteria also exhaust the potentially helpful factors that teachers should consider when evaluating their own​ teacher-made tests. b)Jessica suffers from a misperception about the potential​ test-improvement dividends derivative from​ teachers' often excessively favorable evaluations of their own​ teacher-made classroom tests. c)Although the four​ test-review factors Jessica chose will help her identify certain deficiencies in her​ tests, she should also incorporate as review criteria a full range of widely endorsed​ experience-based and​ research-based (1)​ item-specific guidelines and​ (2) general​ item-writing guidelines. d)Because of the frequent dependence on judgmentally determined policy positions when dealing with social studies content​ (as opposed to the content typically encountered​ in, say, mathematics and science​ courses), Jessica's​ well-intentioned judgmental reviews of her own​ teacher-made tests are likely to be unsuccessful.

c)Although the four​ test-review factors Jessica chose will help her identify certain deficiencies in her​ tests, she should also incorporate as review criteria a full range of widely endorsed​ experience-based and​ research-based (1)​ item-specific guidelines and​ (2) general​ item-writing guidelines.

Many experienced assessors of student affect suggest the most appropriate way for classroom teachers to monitor their students' affect is through the use of: a)Teacher observations of affect-related student behaviors b)Anonymously completed personalized essays c)Anonymously completed self-report inventories d)Affectively oriented performance tests

c)Anonymously completed self-report inventories

Mr.​ Smith, a​ second-year mathematics teacher in a large urban high​ school, is seeking frequent reactions to his​ teacher-made tests from the other mathematics teachers in his school. He typically first secures his​ colleagues' agreement during informal​ faculty-lounge conversations, then relays copies of his tests - along with brief review forms - at several points in the school year. Although Mr. Smith simultaneously carries out systematic reviews of his own tests by employing what he regards as a​ first-rate test-appraisal rubric from his school​ district, when his own views regarding any of his​ test's items conflict with those of his​ colleagues, he always defers to the reactions of his much more experienced fellow teachers. Which option represents the most accurate statement regarding Mr.​ Smith's test-improvement​ efforts? a)Mr. Smith should first identify the math teachers who have at least 5​ years' worth of teaching experience in his school or in another school - then solicit the​ item-review judgments only from such seasoned mathematics instructors rather than seeing reactions from less experienced teachers. b)Because he has chosen to solicit the​ per-item reactions of his fellow mathematics​ teachers, there is really no need for Mr. Smith to undertake his​ own, separate review of the items he originally authored. c)Even though Mr. Smith is wise in seeking the​ item-quality reactions of his​ school's other math teachers - especially because he is only in his second year of teaching - the ultimate decision about the quality of any of his test items should not be deferentially based on collegial input​ but, rather, based on Mr.​ Smith's own judgment. d)To make sure that he and his colleagues are covering the full range of factors on which to evaluate a​ test's items, Mr. Smith should make sure that the evaluative criteria he considers in the​ district-developed test-appraisal rubric he uses are different than the evaluative criteria he asks his fellow math teachers to employ when they review his tests.

c)Even though Mr. Smith is wise in seeking the​ item-quality reactions of his​ school's other math teachers - especially because he is only in his second year of teaching - the ultimate decision about the quality of any of his test items should not be deferentially based on collegial input​ but, rather, based on Mr.​ Smith's own judgment.

Which characteristic would not be considered a quality of an item that would cause the item to be instructionally​ insensitive? a)Item flaws b)Socioeconomic status links c)Format of the item​ (binary, multiple​ choice, etc.) d)Academic aptitude links

c)Format of the item​ (binary, multiple​ choice, etc.)

Given your reading of Chapter​ 8, which would you anticipate being a limitation of​ performance-based assessments? a)Alignment to state standards b)Ability to measure​ higher-order learning c)Lengthy administration time d)The ability to assess all learners accurately

c)Lengthy administration time

Mr. Miller administered a test to his students following his unit on converting fractions to decimals. He concluded that his class did not respond well to his instruction due to low test scores. While this may seem like common practice on the​ surface, what piece of information is Mr. Miller missing to make an adequate determination of his​ students' response to his​ instruction? a)Mr. Miller needs to also consider the​ students' classwork. b)Mr. Miller needs to test his students again with a different test version. c)Mr. Miller is missing pretest data. d)Mr. Miller has all of the information he needs.

c)Mr. Miller is missing pretest data.

Which type of score would indicate a​ test-taker's standing in relation to that of a norm​ group? a)Mean score b)Grade equivalent score c)Percentile score d)None of these would provide this information

c)Percentile score

Which of the following is not a component of the​ seven-step sequence for portfolio assessment found in Chapter​ 9? a)Select criteria by which to evaluate portfolio work samples. b)Involve parents in the portfolio assessment process. c)Portfolio assessment is complicated and should only be done by the teacher. d)Schedule and conduct portfolio conferences.

c)Portfolio assessment is complicated and should only be done by the teacher.

Which of the following, from a classroom teacher's perspective, is probably the most serious drawback of portfolio assessment? a)Parents' negative reactions to portfolio assessment b)Students' negative reactions to portfolio assessment c)Portfolio assessment's time-demands on teachers d)The excessive attention given to portfolio assessment by educational policymakers

c)Portfolio assessment's time-demands on teachers

Which represents an appropriate linear representation of the classic pretest versus posttest​ model? a)instruction --> Pretest --> Review --> Posttest b)Instruction --> Pretest --> Posttest c)Pretest --> Instruction --> Posttest d)None of these accurately represents the classic pretest versus posttest model

c)Pretest --> Instruction --> Posttest

Which statistic would yield information regarding the variability of a​ group's test​ scores? a)Mode b)Mean c)Range d)Median

c)Range

Given your reading of Chapter​ 9, which would you anticipate being a common misperception of​ portfolios? a)They can be used for communication with parents. b)They require a clear and specific purpose. c)They consist of a haphazard collection of student work. d)They include student​ self-evaluations of their work.

c)They consist of a haphazard collection of student work.

Which of the following represents a key impediment to teachers' portfolio assessment? a)General public disapproval of the use of this version of classroom assessment b)Students' unfamiliarity with this assessment strategy c)Time demands linked to a teacher's implementation of portfolio assessment d)School-site administrators' unfamiliarity with the portfolio-assessment process

c)Time demands linked to a teacher's implementation of portfolio assessment

Because she is eager for her students to perform well on their​ 12th-grade senior mathematics tests​ (administered by the state department of​ education), Mrs. Williamson gives students answer keys for all of the​ test's selected-response items. When her students take the test in the school​ auditorium, along with all of the​ school's other​ 12th-graders, she urges them to use the answer keys​ discreetly, and only if necessary. Mrs.​ Williamson's activities constitute​ ________. a)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline b)a violation of the professional ethics guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

c)a violation of both guidelines

Mrs. Gordon makes sure she has her​ sixth-grade students practice each fall for the nationally standardized achievement tests required in the spring by the​ district's school board.​ Fortunately, she has been able to make photocopies of most of the​ test's pages during the past several​ years, so she can organize a highly relevant​ 2-week preparation unit wherein students are given actual test items to solve. At the close of the​ unit, students are supplied with a practice test on which about 60 percent of the test consists of actual items copied from the nationally standardized commercial test. Mrs. Gordon provides students with an answer key after they have taken the practice test so that they can check their answers. Mrs.​ Gordon's activities constitute​ _______. a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

c)a violation of both guidelines

Mrs.​ Jones, a​ third-grade teacher, was asked by officials of her state department of education two years ago to serve as a member of a Bias Review Committee whose task was to consider whether a set of​ not-yet-final items being prepared for the​ state's annual accountability tests contained any assessment bias that would preclude their use. Even though Mrs. Jones realized that her​ committee's item-by-item reviews would not be the only factor determining whether such underdeveloped items would actually be used on the​ state-administered accountability​ tests, she was convinced that many of the items she had reviewed would end up on those tests.​Accordingly, based on the informal notes she had taken during a​ two-day meeting of the Bias Review​ Committee, she always makes certain to give her own​ third-grade students plenty of guided and independent practice in responding to items similar to those she had reviewed. Mrs. Jones generates these practice items​ herself, always trying to make her practice items resemble the specific details of the items she reviewed. Because a new​ teacher-evaluation system in her district calls for the inclusion of state test scores of each​ teacher's students, Mrs. Jones was pleased to see that her own​ third-graders scored well on this​ year's state tests. Mrs.​ Jones's activities constitute​ ________. a)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline b)a violation of the professional ethics guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

c)a violation of both guidelines

The district where Todd Blanding teaches​ high-school chemistry stipulates that up to 100 percent of a​ teacher's student-growth​ evidence, used for teacher​ evaluations, can be based on​ before-instruction and​ after-instruction classroom assessments. Todd and the other teachers in his high school realize how important it is for their students to score well on classroom​ tests, particularly any tests being used to collect evidence of​ pre-instruction to​ post-instruction growth.​ Accordingly, each month the high​ school's staff participates in​ content-alike learning communities so they can explore together suitable​ test-preparation alternatives. Based on these monthly​ explorations, Todd has developed a​ pretest-to-posttest instructional approach whereby he never provides​ item-specific instruction for more than half of the items he intends to use for any upcoming posttest.​ (Item-specific instruction explicitly explores the nuances of a particular​ item.) Because at least half of the items on an instructional​ unit's posttest will not have been discussed in class prior to the​ posttest, Todd is confident that he can base valid interpretations about​ students' growth from their​ pretest-to-posttest performances.​ Todd's activities constitute​ __________. a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

c)a violation of both guidelines

Mrs. Hilliard knows the reading test administered to all state eighth graders contains a set of five fairly lengthy reading​ selections, each of which is followed by about eight​ multiple-choice items dealing with such topics as​ (1) the main idea of the selection or the main idea of its constituent​ paragraphs, (2) the meaning of technical terms that can be inferred from contextual​ clues, and​ (3) the defensibility of​ post-reading inferential statements linked to the selection. Mrs. Hilliard routinely spends time in her​ eighth-grade language arts class trying to improve her​ students' reading comprehension capabilities. She has the students read passages similar to those used in the statewide​ test, then gives her students a variety of practice​ tests, including written​ multiple-choice, true-false, and oral​ short-answer tests in​ which, for​ example, individual students must state aloud what they believe to be the main idea of a specific paragraph in the passage. Mrs.​ Hilliard's activities constitute​ _________. a)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline b)a violation of the professional ethics guideline c)a violation of neither guideline d)a violation of both guidelines

c)a violation of neither guideline

An advantage of​ performance-based assessments over achievement tests is that they can be used to evaluate​ _________. a)the reading skills of students b)the level of a​ student's knowledge c)both the process and product of a task d)the attitudes of students

c)both the process and product of a task

A​ ______________________ is a test that is designed to yield either​ norm-referenced or​ criterion-referenced inferences and that is​ administered, scored, and interpreted in a predetermined manner. a)summative assessment b)formative assessment c)standardized test d)diagnostic test

c)standardized test

Which of the following is not an element typically embodied in performance tests? a)Prespecified evaluative criteria for judging students' responses b)Multiple evaluative criteria c)Judgmental appraisal of students' responses d) A direct link to a preexisting content standard

d) A direct link to a preexisting content standard

Which of the following statements about goal-attainment grading is most defensible? a)"Because of the centrality of curricular aims in any goal-attainment conception of grading, the curricular targets being sought should be carefully described to students' parents and to students themselves at grading time." b)"Given its focus on students' mastery of curricular-targets, goal-attainment grading essentially precludes the possibility of teachers' measuring students' affective dispositions." c)"Because students' effort plays such a pivotal role in a student's ultimate learning, all goal-attainment grading must include a provision for incorporating students' levels of effort." d)"If a teacher can collect defensible assessment evidence of a student's mastery of the teacher's designated curricular aims, then this evidence should be the only basis for goal-attainment grading."

d)"If a teacher can collect defensible assessment evidence of a student's mastery of the teacher's designated curricular aims, then this evidence should be the only basis for goal-attainment grading."

Which of the following is not a key step that a classroom teacher needs to take in implementing a portfolio assessment program? a)Schedule and conduct a meaningful number of portfolio conferences. b)Decide on the kinds of work samples to collect. c)Require students to evaluate continually their own portfolio products. d)Decide which students should be involved in the portfolio assessment program.

d)Decide which students should be involved in the portfolio assessment program.

Consider the following statements regarding test-preparation. Which one is not accurate? a)Appropriate test-preparation will simultaneously improve students' test scores as well as students' mastery of the knowledge and/or skills represented by the test. b)If teachers adhere to the ethical norms of the education profession while preparing their students, this is an important ingredient in appropriate test-preparation activities. c)If relatively brief, generalized test-taking preparation focused on such skills as how to manage one's time during test-taking is quite appropriate. d)If teachers simultaneously direct their instruction toward a test's specific items and the curricular aim on which the test is based, this constitutes appropriate test preparation.

d)If teachers simultaneously direct their instruction toward a test's specific items and the curricular aim on which the test is based, this constitutes appropriate test preparation.

Which of the following is not one of the attributes of concern for an instructionally diagnostic​ test? a)Item quality b)Ease of usage c)Curricular alignment d)Length of assessment

d)Length of assessment

A​ high-school biology​ teacher, Nicholas, relies heavily on his​ students' test performances when he assigns grades to those students.​ Typically, he sends his​ selected-response classroom tests to the​ district's assessment director​ who, usually in 24​ hours, returns a set of item analyses to the teachers. These analyses usually contain an overall mean and a standard deviation for each​ class's test​ performances, as well as p​-values and​ item-discrimination indicators for every item in each test. Nicholas teaches four different biology​ classes, so four separate analyses are carried out at the district office. Nicholas is pleased that very few of his​ tests' items display exceptionally high or exceptionally low p​-values. ​Moreover, the vast majority of the items appear to have discrimination indices of a positive .25 or above. Three items have negative discrimination indices. After looking at the phrasing of those​ items, Nicholas sees how he should revise them to eliminate potentially confusing ambiguities. Please consider the four options​ below, then select the alternative that most accurately describes how Nicholas is dealing with the analyses of his biology tests. a)To obtain a more reliable estimate of item​ quality, Nicholas should have combined the four sets of​ per-class test​ results, then sent them to the district office for a single set of item analyses. b)The three negatively discriminating items were actually the most effective items for​ Nicholas's purposes, so the other items should be​ modified, not the three negative discriminators. c)Nicholas's satisfaction with the many items possessing .25 or higher​ item-discrimination indices was unwarranted because most items deemed suitable for yielding​ norm-referenced interpretations must possess indices of .50 or better. d)Nicholas was appropriately pleased with the results of the​ district-conducted item​ analyses, and he made a sensible decision to revise the three negatively discriminating items.

d)Nicholas was appropriately pleased with the results of the​ district-conducted item​ analyses, and he made a sensible decision to revise the three negatively discriminating items.

Which represents a disadvantage of percentile​ scores? a)Percentile scores do not provide accurate information. b)Percentile scores depend on the quality of the norm group. c)Percentile scores are difficult to interpret. d)None of these are disadvantages of percentile scores.

d)None of these are disadvantages of percentile scores.

A parent receives his​ child's grade equivalent score on the​ third-grade math assessment. The grade equivalent score is 5.3. The parent calls the teacher to discuss whether or not his daughter should skip the fourth grade. Which of the following pieces of advice is most​ appropriate? a)The child should not skip the fourth grade. Grade equivalent scores are not trustworthy scores. b)The child should skip the fourth grade since she has shown mastery at the​ fifth-grade level. c)The child should not skip the fourth grade. The grade equivalent score of 5.3 indicates that the student scored at a level that would be expected of an average fifth grader on the​ third-grade assessment. d)None of these represent appropriate advice.

d)None of these represent appropriate advice.

Performance assessments are often scored via rubric. Given the knowledge​ you've gained from this​ chapter, which type of rubric do you feel is most often​ best-suited for performance​ assessments? a)Task-specific rubrics b)Rubrics are not an appropriate way to score performance assessments. c)Hypergeneral rubrics d)Skill-focused rubrics

d)Skill-focused rubrics

Which of the following would be the most suitable assessment target for a multifocus affective inventory? a)Students' abilities to perform routine physical skills such as ball-tossing and ball-catching b)Students' ability to write a persuasive essay c)Students' skill in solving complex geometric problems d)Students' interests in different subjects

d)Students' interests in different subjects

Which of the following is not a component of the​ seven-step sequence for portfolio assessment found in Chapter​ 9? a)Require students to evaluate continually their own portfolio products. b)Make sure students​ "own" their portfolios. c)Decide on what kinds of work samples to collect. d)Teachers should autonomously decide on evaluative criteria as the content experts.

d)Teachers should autonomously decide on evaluative criteria as the content experts.

Given your reading in this​ chapter, which would you suggest are more effectively measured by​ performance-based assessments? a)Understanding of concepts b)The ability to recognize faulty procedures c)Distinguishing between accurate and inaccurate information d)The ability to formulate problems

d)The ability to formulate problems

Which would be the best justification for the relatively large amount of time required to respond to many​ performance-based assessment​ tasks? a)Students and parents like them b)Performance on one task generalizes well to performance on other tasks c)Multiple scores can be derived from a single task d)The tasks can provide students with valuable learning opportunities

d)The tasks can provide students with valuable learning opportunities

Which of the following is not an important rule to be followed in the classroom assessment of student affect? a)Make all inferences about students' affective status so the inferences are group-focused rather than individual-focused. b)If any self-report inventories are used, students' responses must be truly anonymous. c)Any affective variable being measured must be genuinely noncontroversial. d)To monitor students' ever-changing attitudes and interests, assess affect on at least a bi-weekly basis.

d)To monitor students' ever-changing attitudes and interests, assess affect on at least a bi-weekly basis.

Which of the following terms is appropriate for an evaluation model that employs a​ student's prior achievement and background characteristics as statistical controls to help isolate the effects on student achievement of specific​ teachers, schools, or​ districts? a)Teacher contribution model b)Student achievement model c)Socio-economic model d)Value​ added-model

d)Value​ added-model

Mr. Thompkin teaches mathematics in an urban middle school serving many students from​ lower-income families. Although Mr. Thompkin personally finds his​ district's heavy emphasis on educational testing to be​ excessive, he concedes that his students will benefit from scoring well on the many math tests he is obliged to administer during a school year. Because most of his students cannot afford to enroll in the commercial​ test-preparation programs that are available throughout his​ city, Mr. Thompkin entices a psychologist friend of his - a friend who is particularly knowledgeable about​ test-taking skills - to visit all of his courses one day during the first month of school. The psychologist explains to students not only how to take tests successfully but also how to prepare in advance for any​ high-stakes testing situations. Mr. Thompkin believes one class period per year​ that's focused on​ test-taking rather than learning mathematics is a decent​ trade-off for his students. Mr.​ Thompkin's activities constitute​ ________. a)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline b)a violation of the professional ethics guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

d)a violation of neither guideline

Ms. Sanchez realizes that many of her​ fourth-graders are relatively recent arrivals in the United​ States, having come from Mexico and Central America. Most of her students speak English as a second language and possess limited experience in taking the kinds of standardized tests used so frequently these days in U.S. schools.​ Accordingly, Ms. Sanchez has located a number of​ English-language standardized tests for her​ fourth-grade students, and she has photocopied segments of the tests so the introductory pages will be available to all of her students. Once every few​ weeks, Ms. Sanchez asks her​ fourth-graders to spend classroom instructional time​ trying, as she​ says, to​ "make sense" out of these tests. About 20 minutes is devoted to​ students' reading the​ tests' directions and then determining if they can understand specifically how they are to complete each of the standardized tests. She makes no copies of any items other than those used in a​ test's directions. Ms. Sanchez​ 's activities constitute​ _________. a)a violation of the professional ethics guideline b)a violation of the educational defensibility guideline c)a violation of both guidelines d)a violation of neither guideline

d)a violation of neither guideline

An example of analytic scoring would be to evaluate​ _______ a)overall performance based on a process checklist b)overall performance based on a product review c)the performance of each step listed on a product review d)the performance of each step listed on a process checklist

d)the performance of each step listed on a process checklist

Jurgen ​James, an experienced mathematics​ teacher, loves fussing with numbers based on his classroom assessments. He studies the performance of his previous​ year's students on key tests to help him arrive at​ criterion-referenced interpretations regarding which segments of his instructional program seem to be working well or badly. Based on the performances of both of his algebra​ classes, he learns that the differences in p​-values for items taken by uninstructed students​ (based on a​ first-of-year pretest) and p​-values for items taken by instructed students​ (based on final​ exams) are staggering. That​ is, when pretest p​-values are subtracted from final exam p​-values, the resulting differences are mostly at least .40 or higher. Mr. James concludes that his algebra items were doing precisely the job they were created to do. Which of the quotes from Mr.​ James's fellow teachers most accurately characterizes his conclusion regarding his algebra​ items? ​a)"Jurgen came to the correct​ conclusion, and​ I'm not surprised by his​ students' p​-value jumps - he is a spectacular math​ teacher!" b)​"Jurgen ​is, in this instance at​ least, simply turned around - his high​ pretest-to-posttest differences are precisely what an effective teacher should not want to​ see." ​c)"Even though Jurgen may have accurately concluded that his algebra items were of high​ quality, he should have arrived at this judgment by focusing only on his​ students' performances after​ instruction, not on both​ pre-instruction and​ post-instruction performances." ​d)"The substantial differences in​ students' p​-values by J​urgen's ​students, while​ commendable, are more suitable for tests from which teachers should be arriving at​ norm-referenced, not​ criterion-referenced interpretations."

​a)"Jurgen came to the correct​ conclusion, and​ I'm not surprised by his​ students' p​-value jumps - he is a spectacular math​ teacher!"


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