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Dawadi, Saraswati; Shrestha, Prithvi N. – Educational Assessment, 2018
There has been a steady interest in investigating the validity of language tests in the last decades. Despite numerous studies on construct validity in language testing, there are not many studies examining the construct validity of a reading test. This paper reports on a study that explored the construct validity of the English reading test in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Construct Validity, Reading Tests, English (Second Language)
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Stoffer, Gerald R.; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1977
Contrary to popular belief, and in accordance with research over a long period of time, changed answers to objective test items tend to be correct. (MJB)
Descriptors: Objective Tests, Raw Scores, Response Style (Tests), Test Results
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Shatz, Mark A.; Best, John B. – Teaching of Psychology, 1987
Investigates the circumstances under which answer changing is beneficial or detrimental to test performance. Analyzes the success of answer changing in relation to the reasons offered for changing. Concludes that students who reported guessing as their reason for changing answers were not nearly as likely to benefit from changing as were students…
Descriptors: Confidence Testing, Guessing (Tests), Higher Education, Objective Tests
Lynch, Daniel O.; Smith, Billie C. – 1972
Results of research conducted to ascertain the effect on test grades of changing answer choices are presented. The main questions that were examined were: (1) Does the changing of responses to test items (presumably based upon item reconsideration) result in better test scores?; (2) Is the amount of changes related to the score a person receives…
Descriptors: College Students, Educational Research, Item Analysis, Objective Tests
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Huntley, Diane E. – Journal of Allied Health, 1985
Response changes of two classes of 30 dental hygiene students each were tabulated on multiple-choice questions on quizzes, midterms, and final examinations. Response changes were classified as wrong to right, right to wrong, or wrong to wrong. Significantly more responses were changed from wrong to right than from right to wrong. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Class Rank, Dental Hygienists, Grades (Scholastic), Higher Education
Perrin, David W.; Kerasotes, Dean L. – 1979
It was hypothesized that using asterisks as attention focusing devices would cause students to read all asteriked test items more carefully and would improve test scores of undergraduate education students. Sixty-three undergraduates majoring in elementary or special education were administered a 36-item objective test. Asterisks were used to…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Objective Tests, Response Style (Tests)
Mercer, Maryann – 1977
In a 1977 review of the literature on test answer changing, Mueller and Wasser (EJ 163 236) cited 17 studies and concluded that students changing answers on objective tests gain more points than they lost by so doing. Higher scoring students tend to gain more than do the lower scoring students. Six additional studies not reported in the Mueller…
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Higher Education, Junior High Schools, Literature Reviews
Garvin, Alfred D. – 1971
The objectives of this study were to ascertain the existence of any widely held, systematic sets in response position selection (RPS) and to evaluate the potential biasing effects of such sets on multiple choice and true-false test results. It is concluded that a sudden change in the accustomed pattern of keyed response positions can shift…
Descriptors: Conditioning, Objective Tests, Patterned Responses, Response Style (Tests)
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Mueller, Daniel J.; Schwedel, Allan – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1975
Determines the relationship of sex, answer-changing incidence, and total score to net changes in total score resulting from changing answers, by examining the answer-changing behavior of graduate students responding to achievement test items. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Achievement Tests, Graduate Students, Higher Education
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Kolstad, Rosemarie K.; Kolstad, Robert A. – Educational Research Quarterly, 1989
The effect on examinee performance of the rule that multiple-choice (MC) test items require the acceptance of 1 choice was examined for 106 dental students presented with choices in MC and multiple true-false formats. MC items force examinees to select one choice, which causes artificial acceptance of correct/incorrect choices. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Testing, Dental Students, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
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Benjamin, Ludy T., Jr.; And Others – Teaching of Psychology, 1984
A review of 33 research studies which examined issues surrounding answer-changing behavior on objective tests indicated that (1) the majority of answer changes are from incorrect to correct, (2) most students who change their answers improve their test scores, and (3) most test-takers change answers. Future research needs are discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Guessing (Tests), Higher Education
Reilly, Richard R.; Evans, Franklin R. – 1974
One of the many criticisms leveled at standardized testing is that the time limits commonly used require a speed component of performance which may act to the disadvantaged of certain culturally defined groups. Recent studies by the authors examined the question of differential time limits and group performance for standardized academic aptitude…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Aptitude Tests, College Students, Group Testing