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Mark Wilson – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
This article introduces a new framework for articulating how educational assessments can be related to teacher uses in the classroom. It articulates three levels of assessment: macro (use of standardized tests), meso (externally developed items), and micro (on-the-fly in the classroom). The first level is the usual context for educational…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Measurement, Standardized Tests, Test Items
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Youmi Suk – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Machine learning (ML) methods for causal inference have gained popularity due to their flexibility to predict the outcome model and the propensity score. In this article, we provide a within-group approach for ML-based causal inference methods in order to robustly estimate average treatment effects in multilevel studies when there is cluster-level…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Causal Models, Statistical Inference, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
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Lei Guo; Wenjie Zhou; Xiao Li – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
The testlet design is very popular in educational and psychological assessments. This article proposes a new cognitive diagnosis model, the multiple-choice cognitive diagnostic testlet (MC-CDT) model for tests using testlets consisting of MC items. The MC-CDT model uses the original examinees' responses to MC items instead of dichotomously scored…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Diagnostic Tests, Accuracy, Computer Software
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Giada Spaccapanico Proietti; Mariagiulia Matteucci; Stefania Mignani; Bernard P. Veldkamp – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Classical automated test assembly (ATA) methods assume fixed and known coefficients for the constraints and the objective function. This hypothesis is not true for the estimates of item response theory parameters, which are crucial elements in test assembly classical models. To account for uncertainty in ATA, we propose a chance-constrained…
Descriptors: Automation, Computer Assisted Testing, Ambiguity (Context), Item Response Theory
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Adrian Quintero; Emmanuel Lesaffre; Geert Verbeke – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Bayesian methods to infer model dimensionality in factor analysis generally assume a lower triangular structure for the factor loadings matrix. Consequently, the ordering of the outcomes influences the results. Therefore, we propose a method to infer model dimensionality without imposing any prior restriction on the loadings matrix. Our approach…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Factor Analysis, Factor Structure, Sampling
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Zachary K. Collier; Minji Kong; Olushola Soyoye; Kamal Chawla; Ann M. Aviles; Yasser Payne – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Asymmetric Likert-type items in research studies can present several challenges in data analysis, particularly concerning missing data. These items are often characterized by a skewed scaling, where either there is no neutral response option or an unequal number of possible positive and negative responses. The use of conventional techniques, such…
Descriptors: Likert Scales, Test Items, Item Analysis, Evaluation Methods
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Joemari Olea; Kevin Carl Santos – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Although the generalized deterministic inputs, noisy "and" gate model (G-DINA; de la Torre, 2011) is a general cognitive diagnosis model (CDM), it does not account for the heterogeneity that is rooted from the existing latent groups in the population of examinees. To address this, this study proposes the mixture G-DINA model, a CDM that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Measurement, Models, Algorithms, Simulation
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Youmi Suk; Kyung T. Han – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
As algorithmic decision making is increasingly deployed in every walk of life, many researchers have raised concerns about fairness-related bias from such algorithms. But there is little research on harnessing psychometric methods to uncover potential discriminatory bias inside decision-making algorithms. The main goal of this article is to…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Ethics, Decision Making, Algorithms
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Esther Ulitzsch; Steffi Pohl; Lale Khorramdel; Ulf Kroehne; Matthias von Davier – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Questionnaires are by far the most common tool for measuring noncognitive constructs in psychology and educational sciences. Response bias may pose an additional source of variation between respondents that threatens validity of conclusions drawn from questionnaire data. We present a mixture modeling approach that leverages response time data from…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Response Style (Tests), Questionnaires, Secondary School Students
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Maria Bolsinova; Jesper Tijmstra; Leslie Rutkowski; David Rutkowski – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Profile analysis is one of the main tools for studying whether differential item functioning can be related to specific features of test items. While relevant, profile analysis in its current form has two restrictions that limit its usefulness in practice: It assumes that all test items have equal discrimination parameters, and it does not test…
Descriptors: Test Items, Item Analysis, Generalizability Theory, Achievement Tests
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Waller, Niels G. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2023
Although many textbooks on multivariate statistics discuss the common factor analysis model, few of these books mention the problem of factor score indeterminacy (FSI). Thus, many students and contemporary researchers are unaware of an important fact. Namely, for any common factor model with known (or estimated) model parameters, infinite sets of…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Multivariate Analysis, Factor Analysis, Factor Structure
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Li, Xiao; Xu, Hanchen; Zhang, Jinming; Chang, Hua-hua – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2023
The adaptive learning problem concerns how to create an individualized learning plan (also referred to as a learning policy) that chooses the most appropriate learning materials based on a learner's latent traits. In this article, we study an important yet less-addressed adaptive learning problem--one that assumes continuous latent traits.…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Models, Algorithms, Individualized Instruction
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Wang, Yu; Chiu, Chia-Yi; Köhn, Hans Friedrich – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2023
The multiple-choice (MC) item format has been widely used in educational assessments across diverse content domains. MC items purportedly allow for collecting richer diagnostic information. The effectiveness and economy of administering MC items may have further contributed to their popularity not just in educational assessment. The MC item format…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Nonparametric Statistics, Test Format, Educational Assessment
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Paganin, Sally; Paciorek, Christopher J.; Wehrhahn, Claudia; Rodríguez, Abel; Rabe-Hesketh, Sophia; de Valpine, Perry – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2023
Item response theory (IRT) models typically rely on a normality assumption for subject-specific latent traits, which is often unrealistic in practice. Semiparametric extensions based on Dirichlet process mixtures (DPMs) offer a more flexible representation of the unknown distribution of the latent trait. However, the use of such models in the IRT…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Item Response Theory, Guidance, Evaluation Methods
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Si, Yajuan; Little, Roderick J. A.; Mo, Ya; Sedransk, Nell – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2023
Nonresponse bias is a widely prevalent problem for data on education. We develop a ten-step exemplar to guide nonresponse bias analysis (NRBA) in cross-sectional studies and apply these steps to the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 2010-2011. A key step is the construction of indices of nonresponse bias based on proxy…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Response Rates (Questionnaires), Bias, Children
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