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Showing all 12 results
von der Embse, Nathaniel P.; Witmer, Sara E. – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2014
This study examined the relationship between student anxiety about high-stakes testing and their subsequent test performance. The FRIEDBEN Test Anxiety Scale was administered to 1,134 11th-grade students, and data were subsequently collected on their statewide assessment performance. Test anxiety was a significant predictor of test performance…
Descriptors: Accountability, High Stakes Tests, Group Testing, Test Anxiety
Lacey, Anna; Cornell, Dewey – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2013
Hierarchical regression analyses conducted at the school level found that the perceived prevalence of teasing and bullying was predictive of schoolwide passing rates on state-mandated achievement testing used to meet No Child Left Behind requirements. These findings could not be attributed to the proportion of minority students in the school,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Predictive Validity
Schmitt, Ara; Balles, John; Venesky, Lindsey – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2013
This study investigated the relations among annual school absences, data obtained from triennial reading curriculum-based measurement (R-CBM) screenings, including R-CBM slope, and a high-stakes state reading assessment. Participants included 106 third- and fourth-grade students for whom attendance and reading achievement data were available…
Descriptors: Attendance, Reading Achievement, Curriculum Based Assessment, High Stakes Tests
Leblanc, Michael; Dufore, Emily; McDougal, James – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2012
Cutscores for reading and math (general outcome measures) to predict passage on New York state-mandated assessments were created by using a freely available Excel workbook. The authors used linear regression to create the cutscores and diagnostic indicators were provided. A rationale and procedure for using this method is outlined. This method…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Regression (Statistics), School Personnel, Evaluation Methods
Shriberg, David – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
High-stakes testing has emerged as a central feature of the educational landscape in primary and secondary schools in the United States. Despite this prominence, there is a paucity of guidance available to practitioners on how they can best make predictions about student performance based on available test data. While achievement gaps based on…
Descriptors: High Stakes Tests, Prediction, Performance, Access to Education
Jones, Brett – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
Although it is important to evaluate the intended outcomes of high-stakes testing, it is also important to evaluate the unintended outcomes, which might be as important or more important than the intended outcomes. The purpose of this paper is to examine some of the unintended outcomes of high-stakes testing, including those related to: (a) using…
Descriptors: Psychologists, School Psychologists, Testing, High Stakes Tests
Shriberg, David; Kruger, Louis J. – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
This overview article addresses the different meanings of high takes testing, which takes into consideration accountability at different levels, such as teacher, school, and state. In this regard, "high-stakes" may mean different things in different states or countries. We will advance an argument for why school psychologists should (a) be…
Descriptors: Psychologists, School Psychologists, Testing, School Psychology
Braden, Jeffery P. – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
This article intends to help school psychologists understand the nature of high stakes tests, methods for analyzing and reporting high stakes test data, standards for tests and program evaluation, and application of appropriate practices to program planning and evaluation. Although it is readily acknowledged that high stakes test data are not…
Descriptors: Test Results, Program Evaluation, Psychologists, School Psychologists
Mason, Emanuel J. – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
Validity and reliability of the new high stakes testing systems initiated in school systems across the United States in recent years in response to the accountability features mandated in the No Child Left Behind Legislation largely depend on item response theory and new rules of measurement. Reliability and validity in item response theory and…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Testing, Test Validity, Item Response Theory
Nichols, Sharon L. – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
I review the literature on the impact on student achievement of high-stakes testing. Its popularity as a mechanism for holding educators accountable has triggered studies to examine whether its promise to increase student learning has been fulfilled. The review concludes there is no consistent evidence to suggest high-stakes testing leads to…
Descriptors: Testing, Academic Achievement, High Stakes Tests, School Psychology
Shriberg, David – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
School psychologists are well prepared to provide leadership in an era when gathering and interpreting data is center-stage in education reform. The leadership literature is not well known in school psychology and a summary of major leadership theories pertinent to the practice of school psychology is provided. Strategies for leading change in a…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Change Agents, Educational Change, School Psychology
Kruger, Louis J.; Wandle, Caroline; Struzziero, Joan – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2007
High stakes testing puts considerable pressure on schools, teachers, and students to achieve at high levels. Therefore, how schools and individuals cope with this major source of stress may have important implications for the success of high stakes testing. This article reviews relevant theory and research on stress as they relate to public…
Descriptors: Testing, High Stakes Tests, Coping, Stress Variables

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