TEST CONSTRUCTION - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 50
About This Presentation
Title:

TEST CONSTRUCTION

Description:

To win the Tour de France 5x in a row is one. To walk on the moon is another. ... 2. France. 3. Ireland. 4. Italy. 5. Sweden. 6. Soviet Union. 7. Germany. 1. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:14949
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: clem1
Category:
Tags: construction | test | de | france | tour

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: TEST CONSTRUCTION


1
TEST CONSTRUCTION
  • Classroom Assessment
  • Chapter 16
  • Blooms from Chapter 12

2
Planning
  • Specify the content the test will cover.
  • State test objectives in behavioral terms.
  • Make sure that test items cover all 6 cognitive
    levels outlined in Blooms taxonomy.

3
Ideally,
  • Create items for test after each unit taught
  • (not the day before the test)
  • Create a test blueprint

4
Test Blueprint
  • A table that lists important objectives to be
    taught
  • The percentage or number of items that cover a
    topic
  • Can be used to decide the number of items that
    should be written for each objective

5
Sample Blueprint for Final
  • Learning theorists 11 questions
  • Info processing 8
  • Planning and instruction 6
  • Motivation 7
  • Classroom Assessment 10
  • Standardized tests 8

6
By Blooms Taxonomy
  • When you create your own test, will that be
    application or synthesis?
  • For assessment, will be asked to apply what you
    have learned to interpret a students scores.
    (Application).

7
Essays and Short-Answer Items
  • To be objective, write your intended answer first
  • Write comments so you can justify grade
  • Score all of the students on one essay before
    moving to the next.

8
Completion items
  • Fill-in-the-blank
  • Be careful on these (students should not have to
    be psychic to be correct)
  • Hard to use for higher-order thinking

9
Examples
  • Bad The largest city in Puerto Rico is ___.
  • Why is it bad? Because you could write The
    capital or San Juan.
  • Corrected The name of the largest city in Puerto
    Rico is____.

10
2nd example
  • Armstrong was the first American to_____.
  • Is this bad or good?

11
Bad because.
  • Too many correct answers are possible
  • To win the Tour de France 5x in a row is one.
  • To walk on the moon is another.
  • Need to carefully re-read these for this error.

12
Other examples
  • WW II ended in ____.
  • Need to suggest what you are looking for, or I
    could say defeat of the Japanese, September, or
    1945 and be equally correct.
  • WW II ended in the year ____.

13
Fill-in Example
  • The number of eggs most species of penguins lay
    is ___eggs, while the King Emperor penguins lay
    only ___egg.

14
2nd Real Life Example
  • One misconception about penguins is that they are
    not really birds because unlike other birds they
    do not have ____.

15
Above all
  • Do NOT have more than one blank in the sentence.

16
Good items
  • Should pose a problem
  • Blank should be near the end of the sentence
  • If problem requires a numerical answer, indicate
    the units for the response
  • And consider why not ask a direct question
    instead?

17
Direct questions
  • Text p. 532 recommends this then has
  • The freezing point of water is
  • A. 25 F b. 32 F c. 39 F d. 46 F
  • The freezing point of water is
  • A. 30 F 31 F c. 32 F d. 33 F
  • Why not ask What is the freezing point of water?

18
True-false
  • Should only be used with lower grades
  • Never use always or Never
  • Use shorter statements
  • Avoid double negatives

19
Matching Items
  • Good for factual items
  • Not good for higher-order thinking
  • Seem easy but they are not
  • Column A should be the one with the longer items
    B should be the responses
  • Lists should be homogeneous

20
To avoid easy guessing,
  • The lists should NOT be evenly matched
  • Should be about 3 more options than descriptions
  • Or you may say that each option may be used more
    than once

21
Good idea to
  • Introduce some order into the lists
    (alphabetical, chronological order)
  • Use both names, not Ford, but Gerald Ford or
    Henry Ford or Evelyn Ford
  • Include directions about how to match

22
Sample items
  • 1. Lincoln
  • 2. Ford
  • 3. Bell
  • 4. Washington
  • 5. Whitney
  • A. invented the telephone
  • B. invented the auto
  • C. President in 20th century
  • D. Civil war president
  • E. invented the cotton gin

23
Last matching was poor for several reasons
  • List not homogenous
  • Needed more options

24
Better matching match the inventor with his
invention
  • 1. A.G. Bell
  • 2. Jacques Cousteau
  • 3. George deMestral
  • 4. Thomas Edison
  • 5. Guglielmo Marconi
  • A. scuba gear
  • B. phonograph
  • C. wireless
  • D. hearing aid
  • E. velcro
  • F. bicycle
  • G. airplane
  • H. automobile

25
Match each country with its role in WWII from the
U.S. perspective
  • 1. England
  • 2. France
  • 3. Ireland
  • 4. Italy
  • 5. Sweden
  • 6. Soviet Union
  • 7. Germany
  • 1. Ally
  • 2. enemy
  • 3. declared neutrality

26
Multiple Choice items
  • Consists of a stem with a question or incomplete
    statement
  • Followed by 4 responses
  • 3 distractors, 1 correct answer
  • Each distractor should be plausible

27
First, the Donts
  • Dont use the word NOT in stems. The item should
    be reworded.
  • Ex. Which is not a characteristic of females?
  • Hint if it isnt a characteristic of females,
    then it probably is of males and could be
    reworded which one is a male characteristic?

28
Concepts are taught
  • Not non-concepts
  • Which is not a characteristic of giraffes?
  • Why not ask about what they are, not what they
    are not.

29
Dont
  • Use all of the above
  • None of the above
  • Or a and b but not C.
  • You can combine them verbally (see p.146) but NOT
    by item number
  • If you do b c, but not d, youve turned the
    question into a T/F question

30
Dont provide grammar clue
  • Correct response should not be identified by
    grammar
  • Ex. One African animal that is a vegetarian is an
  • a. jaguar b. lion c. elephant d. tiger

31
Dos
  • Put as much of the item in the stem as possible
  • Keep wording in the distractors to a minimum
  • Students should be able to identify the problem
    of the question

32
Foils or distractors
  • Should be about the same length

33
Can you guess the right answer?
  • Little Blue penguins are different from Emperor
    penguins because Little Blues
  • A. stand 4 feet tall
  • B. nest near humans or may even live under summer
    cottages.
  • C. lay a single egg.

34
Organize the detractors chronologically
  • 1. In what year did humans first walk on the
    moon?
  • a. 1975 b. 1957 c. 1969 d. 1963
  • Instead write
  • a. 1957 b. 1963 c. 1969 d. 1975

35
Only 1 response is correct
  • Reread your questions to make sure that only one
    answer is possible
  • Occasionally, you may write one with no correct
    answer
  • LM recommends humbly admitting your error

36
Check your test balance
  • Be sure to have roughly the same number of A B C
    and D answers
  • If you want to write a slightly easier test, put
    more answers in A
  • Want to be tough, put them in D

37
Item analysis
  • Probably want to discard any ? That gt 75-80 of
    the students fail
  • May check for high/low, that is are good students
    failing the question, or poor students?

38
Alternative Assessments
  • Performance-based assess.
  • Authentic assessments

39
Performance Assessments
  • Dioramas, book reports, oral presentations
  • From knowing to showing
  • Depending on subject, very good idea

40
Can do this as a formative evaluation as well
  • After a lesson on dinosaurs eating habits, could
    have children sort dinosaurs by meat eating or
    plant eating.
  • Watching them do this would provide an on going
    assessment

41
Performance Criteria
  • Specify what the student must do
  • Directs teachers observations of perf.
  • Helps them decide what to do
  • Develop scoring rubric

42
Authentic Assessment
  • Sometimes used interchangeably w/ performance
    assessment
  • Authentic however should be how something is used
    in real world

43
Authentic
  • Student would prepare a cover letter for an
    application
  • Student would prepare a resume
  • Student use writing as writing is used in real
    world

44
Pre-service Teacher would
  • Prepare a test from material provided
  • Interpret standardized test scores to a parent

45
Scoring Rubric
  • Take home final

46
Rubric for essay test
  • 1. In T/F questions, the items are statements.
  • 2. Always or never was not used.
  • 3. On fill-ins, the units were mentioned.

47
Matching
  • 1. directions provided
  • 2. more choices on right than questions on left
    (3 suggested in lecture, due to El Ed at least
    2).
  • 3. longer items on left.
  • 4. at least 4 items.
  • 5. list is homogeneous

48
Multiple choice
  • Foils are similar length
  • No double negatives
  • The question is not easily guessed.
  • At least 4 items.
  • Do not use all of the above/none of the above.

49
Blooms Taxonomy
  • Can identify correctly which of the 6 objectives
    matches their questions (p.380)
  • Explains why in their own words (testing their
    comprehension)

50
Evaluate this question
  • Which of the following would you expect to be
    most comfortable in an American zoo?
  • A. Galapagos
  • B. King
  • C. Emperor
  • D. Little Blue
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com