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Shifting from paper and pencil testing to CBA

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Iceland inherited a Danish education system 100 years ago. ... So how is it possible to unravel this, i.e. the reading effect from the computer ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Shifting from paper and pencil testing to CBA


1
Shifting from paper and pencil testing to CBA
  • Júlíus K. Björnsson

2
Some background
  • Iceland inherited a Danish education system 100
    years ago.
  • Lots of changes have been done in the 20th
    century leading to a number of differences.
  • Traditionally the state has been responsible for
    primary and secondary education.
  • Today the responsibility lies with the local
    communities.
  • The state continues to publish a central
    curriculum and does quality evaluations of
    various kinds.
  • The development has been going faster and faster
    during the last 50 years, and especially the last
    25.
  • Changes have even been too fast, to little
    experience gathered before the system is changed
    once again.

3
Background
  • Teacher training was changed 25 years ago, and is
    now being changed again (5-year MA programme).
  • Laws about primary and secondary education were
    changed in 1974, and now the whole system is
    being revised again.

4
Quality and accountability
  • National testing
  • For the 4th and 7th grades (10 and 12).
  • For the 10th grade (15), high stakes test
    admittance to upper secondary.
  • Schools do self-evaluating according to
    guidelines from the ministry.
  • Regular external evaluations by outside experts.
  • National coordinated tests are done in order to
    ensure that all students are evaluated in the
    same way, with comparable results. An equity
    thing.

5
National testing
  • Has been going on for the last 80 years. Started
    in 1929 (an educator was in the US and studied
    with E. Thorndike).
  • Various methods and tests have been used, often
    changed every 10-20 years.
  • Current system started in 1993, for the first
    time with the extensive use of psychometrics and
    other modern methods (ETI).
  • 10th grade tested in Icelandic (reading), math,
    english, danish, social studies and science.
  • In 1996 there were implemented new tests for both
    4th and 7th grade - reading/writing and
    mathematics.
  • National testing in upper secondary started in
    2003, stopped in 2006 (short sad story).

6
Purpose of the tests?
  • Check that the goals and subgoals in the
    curriculum are reached. (or how many reach them).
  • Give teachers directions for each students
    continued studies.
  • Give students, parents and schools information
    about each students status and development.
  • Gather information about schools, how do they do
    in each subject, compared to other schools.
  • And in the 10th grade.
  • Collect information for upper secondary schools
    about each students standing.
  • Information about
  • The whole system-regions-municipalities-schools-cl
    asses-students.
  • The requirements are multiple use of the same
    tests-leads to psychometric problems.

7

In practice
  • Tests are written at the ETI, cooperation with
    groups of teachers and experts, piloted in
    various ways. Psychometrically sound.
  • Administered at the same time for all students in
    the whole country.
  • Students in the 10th grade can choose how many
    tests they take, i.e. if they want to enter upper
    secondary school. In practice they take as many
    as they can manage. Almost everyone takes
    icelandic, math and english.
  • Entirely new tests every year (everything is
    published afterwards).

8
In practice
  • Every student gets a grade 3-4 weeks after the
    tests- Various reports for the ministry, the
    schools, classes/teachers etc.
  • All tests are centrally evaluated at the ETI.
  • In order to ensure scorer reliability and
    coordinated grades.
  • Tests for the 4th and 7th grade in October each
    year.
  • Tests for 10th grade in May each year.
  • Students from 8th og 9th grade can take the 10th
    grade tests, but must then wait for a year to
    enter upper secondary school.
  • This is going to be changed now(last week).

9
How do we change the system?
  • The whole school system has recently been more
    and more leaning towards individualized teaching
    and learning.
  • Nobody knows really how to do this, with the same
    size classes and the teacher-student ratio
    relatively unchanged.
  • The national tests have both positive and
    negative aspects.
  • The ETI has proposed a change of the current
    testing system over to computerized adaptive
    testing.
  • This proposal has been enthusiastically received
    by everyone. (i.e. until we begin to talk about
    financing).
  • We have been actively promoting the idea now for
    two years, so now everyone is askingWhen do we
    start?

10
What do we gain-CAT/CBA
  • Shorter testing
  • Adaptive tests better test-student fit
  • Quick results
  • Better measurement of the extremes-both ends
  • More enjoyable for students?
  • Less stress and press (not everyone at the same
    time)
  • Testing with modern technology which everybody is
    using all the time.
  • More rich items and materiels (multimedia)
  • Reuse of items.
  • Cheaper and quicker coding
  • Probably better information about the
    schoolsystem

11
The downside
  • Very expensive startup, especially CAT
  • Some competencies cannot be tested.
  • High requirements for technical and psychometric
    competence.
  • More personell for testing.
  • Takes time.

12
An adaptive test
13
Higher measurement precision
14
But the central questions are!
  • What are we really measuring?
  • How does it change when we go from PP tests over
    to CBA or even all the way to CAT?
  • Are the competencies the same?
  • Do some students get an unfair advantage/disadvant
    age in a CBA/CAT test? (e.g. gender)
  • Many effects have to be evaluated!
  • Long list of effects!
  • And then there are the technical problems
  • Nonstandardized computers-software.
  • Congested internet (CAT and Internet)
  • Etc.
  • So what do we do?

15
Some CBAS results
  • Three countries (Iceland, Denmark and Korea)
    participated in the Computerized Assessment of
    Science-CBAS which was conducted alongside the
    PISA 2006.
  • Here you have some results (with the permission
    of the OECD and the countries involved).
  • The CBAS was as standardized as possible,
    everyone used the same laptops, software etc.,
    trained test-administrators. No internet
    connection, restricted environment (no connection
    outside).
  • So what happened with performance

16
Some CBAS results
  • All data was rescaled for the three participating
    countries.
  • Mean scores in science, both CBAS scores and PP
    scores are not comparable to the scores which
    will be presented on the 4th of december.
  • Everything was put on a scale with a mean of 500
    and a SD of 100, for these three countries.
  • So not only the means are different, the whole
    scale is different, i.e. not the same distance
    between scores.
  • Mention this just so it is clear that I am not
    talking about PISA 2006 results.

17
Many different types of items
18
Some restrictions
  • Reduced reading load.
  • Probable big effect from just this as it is known
    that the correlation between scores in reading
    and science are very high, above 0,60 and even
    higher.
  • So students with lower reading abilities should
    do relatively better (Boys should do better)
  • So how is it possible to unravel this, i.e. the
    reading effect from the computer effect?

19
Average scores (plausible values)
20
So what does this mean?
  • Gender differences change.
  • In Iceland (and to some extent in Korea) they not
    only change in magnitude they change in
    direction!
  • What happened to the boys?
  • What happened to the girls?
  • What did they experience?
  • Lets look at some of that

21
Correlations between CBAS and PP test.
The Icelandic discrepancy?
22
I found the computer test enjoyable
Boys generally enjoy the CBA more,-another
Icelandic Exception?
23
I found the PP test enjoyable
Nobody enjoys the PP test or what? - but there
are differences
24
If you had to take a two hour test which option
would you choose?
The third Icelandic exception?
25
Where are we then?
  • The PP and the CBAS most probably are measuring
    the same competency (high correlation)
  • Gender differences are different and in some
    cases very different.
  • Students are ambivalent towards CBA, and more so
    in some places.
  • Must be analyzed more- according to
  • Type of item
  • Content
  • Presentation mode
  • And more

26
And finally
  • How can we implement a CBA system knowing what we
    do both from the CBAS and from other tests (not
    mentioned here).
  • The only viable course of action is to implement
    a pilot project which
  • Compares PP and CBA (in each country)
  • Compares sequential CBA and CAT
  • Compares PP and CAT
  • And does all of this in the same population, with
    randomized assignment to test mode and a balanced
    design where students take two or more modes of
    tests in the same subject.
  • Only after analyzing the results from such a test
    will it be possible to answer the questions posed
    here earlier.
  • Are we measuring the same things, and if not what
    is different?
  • And all the other questions.
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