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Showing 46 to 60 of 78 results Save | Export
Powers, Donald E.; Wilson, Susan T. – 1993
It has been reasonably well established that test takers can sometimes answer correctly some reading comprehension passages without reading the passages on which the questions are based. This issue was studied with the new Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) in a study designed to determine the strategies by which examinees are able to achieve…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Construct Validity, High School Students, High Schools
Eddy, Peter A. – 1981
Students in the eleventh grade in three Montgomery County, Maryland high schools were the subjects of a study to determine the effect of foreign language study on performance on the verbal section of the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT). The following results were reported: (1) when verbal ability is controlled, students who study foreign language…
Descriptors: Correlation, Educational Benefits, Educational Research, High Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kean, Donald K.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Education, 1987
Two experiments examined the role that college students' verbal aptitude and evaluation anxiety play in the production of persuasive letters. Results showed that verbal aptitude should be considered when predicting the quality of students writing. Taking writing anxiety into account did not increase the predictive power of verbal aptitude scores.…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Multiple Regression Analysis, Persuasive Discourse
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Searleman,Alan; And Others – Intelligence, 1984
The Scholastic Aptitude Test scores of 86 left-handed undergraduates were examined as a function of familial sinistrality, strength of left-handedness, and sex. An interaction was found between familial sinistrality and strength of handedness in terms of aptitude. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Cognitive Ability, College Entrance Examinations, Family Characteristics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hayes, Donald P.; Wolfer, Loreen T.; Wolfe, Michael F. – American Educational Research Journal, 1996
Contents of 800 elementary, middle, and high school textbooks published from 1919 to 1991 were analyzed with regard to their levels of difficulty. Following World War II, there was a major decline in schoolbook difficulty which may have led to the subsequent decline in SAT-verbal scores. (MAK)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Difficulty Level, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Ewing, Maureen; Camara, Wayne J.; Millsap, Roger E. – College Board, 2006
The purpose of this study is to reexamine the relationship between PSAT/NMSQT scores and AP Examination grades using more recent test data in order to obtain additional validation evidence for using the PSAT/NMSQT to identify AP students. PSAT/NMSQT data from October 2000 and October 2001 and AP data from May 2002 and May 2003 were analyzed. The…
Descriptors: Correlation, Scores, College Entrance Examinations, High School Students
Dorans, Neil J. – College Entrance Examination Board, 1999
Correspondences between ACT[superscript TM] and SAT[superscript R] I scores are presented from a conceptual framework that distinguishes among three kinds of correspondences, namely, equating, scaling, and prediction. Construct similarity plays an important role in determining the nature and degree of correspondence that can be achieved. This…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Scores, Standardized Tests, Prediction
Walbaum, Sharlene D. – 1989
Three variables (verbal aptitude, listening ability, and notetaking) that may mediate how much college students learn from a lecture were studied. Verbal aptitude was operationalized as a Verbal Scholastic Aptitude Test (VSAT) score. Listening ability was measured as the score on an auditory short-term memory task, using the serial running memory…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, College Students, Cues, Encoding (Psychology)
Bejar, Isaac I. – 1984
The purpose of this report is to distill curricular and testing implications of brain research. The report will focus on three topics. One topic is the possibility that brain lateralization--that is, the degree to which the two brain hemispheres specialize in different types of information processing--is an individual differences variable that…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Alexander, Karl L.; Pallas, Aaron M. – American Journal of Education, 1984
Criticizes the "Five New Basics" proposal on the basis of the Educational Testing Service's Growth Study, which found that completion of core curriculum enhances test performance only if the student's course performance is very high. Concludes that the National Commission did not comprehensively evaluate current educational conditions…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Core Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Evaluation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Stanley, Julian C. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 1988
Statistics are presented concerning background characteristics of 292 students who scored well on the mathematical sections of the Scholastic Aptitude Test at age 12 or younger. Discussed are the ratio of girls to boys, geographic distribution, verbal ability, parents' education level and occupational status, siblings, and educational…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Academically Gifted, Acceleration (Education), Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Baratz-Snowden, Joan – Change, 1987
The performance of black students on standardized tests is still significantly below that of their white counterparts. Data on black performance on standardized tests and trends on the factors that affect that performance are examined. The OERI study on Poverty, Achievement and the Distribution of Compensatory Education Services is discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Students, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education
Liu, Jinghua; Feigenbaum, Miriam; Cook, Linda – College Entrance Examination Board, 2004
This study explored possible configurations of the new SAT® critical reading section without analogy items. The item pool contained items from SAT verbal (SAT-V) sections of 14 previously administered SAT tests, calibrated using the three-parameter logistic IRT model. Multiple versions of several prototypes that do not contain analogy items were…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Critical Reading, Logical Thinking, Difficulty Level
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Decker, Warren D. – Communication Education, 1982
Suggests that the verbal score on the Scholastic Aptitude Test is not an adequate criterion for assigning students to remedial communication instruction. Concludes that the communication skills deficit model demonstrates the capacity for consistent measurement of communication skills if evaluators are trained to use the same decision-making…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, College Students, Communication Research, Communication Skills
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gustin, William C.; Corazza, Luciano – Roeper Review, 1994
Analysis of the relative contribution of age, gender, and verbal and mathematical reasoning abilities (measured by subtests of the Scholastic Aptitude Test) as predictors of success in accelerated secondary science courses found that a composite of verbal and mathematical reasoning ability was the most powerful predictor and verbal reasoning…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Academic Ability, Academic Achievement, Academically Gifted
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