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Test Development and Analysis

Test Development and Analysis. Session One - 14 May, 2014 What is measurement? Margaret Wu. Course content. Introduction to psychological measurement Test development Classical test theory Item response theory. Assessment. Assignment: Attendance 5% Weekly tasks 15%

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Test Development and Analysis

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  1. Test Development and Analysis Session One - 14 May, 2014 What is measurement? Margaret Wu

  2. Course content • Introduction to psychological measurement • Test development • Classical test theory • Item response theory

  3. Assessment • Assignment: • Attendance 5% • Weekly tasks 15% • Design , administer and analyse a test. Prepare a written report 80%

  4. Overview of Week 1 Lecture • What is measurement? • Nominal, Ordinal, Interval, Ratio scales • Direct and indirect measurement • Latent variables • Some Key Concepts in Measurement • Validity • Reliability

  5. Psychological Measurement Measurement is about assigning numbers to represent an attribute. Levels of measurement • Nominal • Numerical values associated with a named attribute • Numbers on racing cars • Coding of gender (male=0, female=1) • Student identification codes in a survey • Classification of students with disability: hearing impaired, sight impaired, immobile etc. • Names (or labels)!

  6. Levels of Measurement • Ordinal • Numerical values that order with respect to an attribute • Position in which racing cars finish a race • Level of education attained • Codes for an item on attitude scale (eg Likert scale, strongly disagree=0, disagree=1, agree=2, strongly agree =3) • Orderings

  7. Levels of Measurement • Interval • Numerical values that give the amount of an attribute • Temperature • Time 5 mins to home time • Ratio • Numerical values that give the amount of an attribute and have an absolute zero • Height • Count of votes

  8. Summary: Levels of Measurement Source: http://trochim.human.cornell.edu/kb/measlevl.htm

  9. Latent Variables and Directness of Measurement • Students don’t wear their ability on their back • Ability must be indirectly measured through related observables • Indirect measurement needed • psychometrics (and educational measurement) is the science of indirect measurement • also has an extensive role in physical measurement

  10. Latent Variables and Manifest (Observable) Variables -- 1 1 2 Manifest variables, or “Items” Latent Variable 3 4 5 6 Not directly observable Directly observable

  11. An Example of a Latent Variable and Manifest Variables • Latent Variable: Eating disorder • Manifest Variables: symptoms • These can be observed. • Data can be gathered through a questionnaire.

  12. Example: Bulimia Check • Do you believe that you must continually be on a restrictive diet? • Do you eat in secret? • Do you experience feelings of guilt, shame or self-disgust in relation to your eating behaviour? • Do you binge eat more than twice a week? • Do you make yourself vomit? • Do you take fluid tablets (diuretics) in order to feel lighter? • Do you weigh yourself at least daily? • Do you abuse laxatives? • Do you believe that your life is evaluated by your weight, shape and size?

  13. Measurement of Latent Variables • Summing up the manifest variables • Scores on a questionnaire • Scores on a test • Scores reflect the “amount” of the latent variable • E.g., The number of “yes” answers reflects how serious the eating disorder is.

  14. Latent Variables and Manifest (Observable) Variables -- 2 1 2 Latent Variable 3 “Items” 4 5 6 A Bigger Idea Little Ideas

  15. One Item is Not Likely to be Sufficient -- 1 Latent Variable 1 ? = A Bigger Idea Little Idea

  16. One Item is Not Likely to be Sufficient -- 2 Latent Variable 1 1 Other stuff A Bigger Idea Little Idea

  17. Latent Variables and Manifest (Observable) Variables -- 3 1 1 2 2 Latent Variable 3 3 Other stuff 4 4 5 5 6 6 A Bigger Idea Little Ideas

  18. Implications of our model • Latent variable is central • Items can be changed • Latent variable “predicts” item responses • Items are reflections • Each item reflects the latent variable AND other stuff

  19. Measurement Validity & Reliability

  20. What is Validity? • A test is valid if it measures what it purports to measure. Allen, M.J. and Yen, W. M. (1979.) Introduction to Measurement Theory • A test is valid if it does what it is intended to do. Nunnally, J.C. (1978) Psychometric Theory

  21. What is measurement reliability?

  22. Latent Variables and Manifest (Observable) Variables -- 3 1 1 2 2 Latent Variable 3 3 Other stuff 4 4 5 5 6 6 A Bigger Idea Little Ideas

  23. Reliability • Is the instrument measuring something consistently & dependably • It pays no attention to the something • Reliability is a necessary, but not sufficient condition for validity. • Do repeated applications of the instrument under similar conditions yield consistent results?

  24. Consistency? • Would the test yield the same result tomorrow? • If you changed coders, would the test yield the same result. • If you choose another set of items from a content domain, would the test yield the same result

  25. Reliability or Validity?

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