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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
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Zheng, Xiaying; Sahin, Fusun; Erberber, Ebru; Fonseca, Frank – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2023
Unfavorable test-taking behaviors, such as speededness and disengagement, have long been a validity concern for large-scale low-stakes assessments. Understanding the presence and extent of such behaviors is important for ensuring the validity of inferences based on test scores. This study examined test-taking behaviors using item response time…
Descriptors: Identification, Test Wiseness, Achievement Tests, Foreign Countries
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Putwain, David W.; Symes, Wendy – School Psychology Quarterly, 2018
It is well established that test anxiety is negatively related to examination performance. Based on attentional control theory, the aim of this study was to examine whether increased effort can protect against performance debilitating test anxiety. Four hundred and sixty-six participants (male = 228; 48.9%; White = 346, 74.3%; mean age = 15.7…
Descriptors: Correlation, Attention Control, Test Anxiety, Short Term Memory
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Bramley, Tom – Educational Research, 2010
Background: A recent article published in "Educational Research" on the reliability of results in National Curriculum testing in England (Newton, "The reliability of results from national curriculum testing in England," "Educational Research" 51, no. 2: 181-212, 2009) suggested that: (1) classification accuracy can be…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Educational Research, Testing, Measurement
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Twist, Liz; Sainsbury, Marian – Educational Research, 2009
Background: In England, there are concerns about boys' under-achievement in reading, and girls consistently do better than boys in national reading tests taken by 11-year-olds. At the same time, there have been accusations of bias in the content of the reading tests. Purpose: This article looks at the performance of boys and girls on the 2008…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Females, Reading Tests, Foreign Countries
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Kudliskis, Voldis; Burden, Robert – Thinking Skills and Creativity, 2009
The strengths and weaknesses of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) are described with reference to its origins, previous research and comments from critics and supporters. A case is made for this allegedly theoretical approach to provide the kind of outcomes focused intervention that psychology and psychologists can offer to schools. In…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Psychology, Secondary School Students, Models
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Murphy, R.J.L. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1982
A study of scores on England's General Certificate of Education (GCE) examinations suggested that, compared to females, males perform better on objective tests than they do on other forms of assessment. The fact that nonobjective tests emphasize written communication skills, which tend to be more highly developed in female candidates, may explain…
Descriptors: Educational Testing, Females, Foreign Countries, Males
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Francis, J.C. – Educational Studies, 1981
Examines the relationship of study techniques and test-taking strategies to success on the "O" level of the British General Certificate of Education (GCE) examination. Findings showed that teachers and students felt that course reviews, including study of past examinations, was the best preparation. (AM)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Research, Higher Education, Review (Reexamination)
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Torrance, Harry – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 1981
Focuses on mental tests, test developers, and the social and historical context in which mental tests were developed in the United States and England. Suggests that the tests were produced in an intellectual and social climate heavily influenced by eugenicist theory and that more attention should be paid to research which casts doubts on the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Measurement Objectives
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Swatton, Peter – Research Papers in Education, 1995
British students completed assessments examining the extent to which they could control variables and ways factors like question format and context affected their test performance. Factors within the questions, rather than skills themselves, led to large variations in facility. Aspects of the questions themselves were the most significant…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods
Secondary School Examinations Council, London (England). – 1964
This bulletin addresses all concerned with examinations for the Certificate of Secondary Education, particularly teachers, with suggestions to improve the efficiency and fairness of examining. The bulletin is divided into two parts: Part I - Examining Techniques: General Principles, covers such major subjects as objectives of the course, analysing…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Bulletins, Educational Objectives
Vernon, Philip E. – 1964
The advantages and disadvantages of the objective-type tests considered for use in Britain for the Certificate of Secondary Education are presented. The objective test is a form of examination in which every question is set in such a way as to have only one right answer. Of the four types of assessment, objective, conventional written (or oral),…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Bulletins, Educational Objectives