Research brief
Absenteeism and achievement
2019
Description
In partnership with Santa Ana Unified School District, we explore the impact of chronic absenteeism on student achievement over two years and whether missing 10% of days is too late to take action.
View research briefTopics: School & test engagement
Related Topics
An investigation of examinee test-taking effort on a large-scale assessment
Most previous research involving the study of response times has been conducted using locally developed instruments. The purpose of the current study was to examine the amount of rapid-guessing behavior within a commercially available, low-stakes instrument.
By: Steven Wise, J. Carl Setzer, Jill R. van den Heuvel, Guangming Ling
Topics: Measurement & scaling, School & test engagement, Student growth & accountability policies
The utility of adaptive testing in addressing the problem of unmotivated examinees
This integrative review examines the motivational benefits of computerized adaptive tests (CATs), and demonstrates that they can have important advantages over conventional tests in both identifying instances when examinees are exhibiting low effort, and effectively addressing the validity threat posed by unmotivated examinees.
By: Steven Wise
Topics: Measurement & scaling, Innovations in reporting & assessment, School & test engagement
Response time as an indicator of test taker speed: assumptions meet reality
The growing presence of computer-based testing has brought with it the capability to routinely capture the time that test takers spend on individual test items. This, in turn, has led to an increased interest in potential applications of response time in measuring intellectual ability and achievement. Goldhammer (this issue) provides a very useful overview of much of the research in this area, and he provides a thoughtful analysis of the speed-ability trade-off and its impact on measurement.
By: Steven Wise
Topics: Measurement & scaling, Innovations in reporting & assessment, School & test engagement
Effort analysis: Individual score validation of achievement test data
Whenever the purpose of measurement is to inform an inference about a studentās achievement level, it is important that we be able to trust that the studentās test score accurately reflects what that student knows and can do. Such trust requires the assumption that a studentās test event is not unduly influenced by construct-irrelevant factors that could distort his score. This article examines one such factorātest-taking motivationāthat tends to induce a person-specific, systematic negative bias on test scores.
By: Steven Wise
Topics: Measurement & scaling, Innovations in reporting & assessment, School & test engagement
Modeling student test-taking motivation in the context of an adaptive achievement test
This study examined the utility of response time-based analyses in understanding the behavior of unmotivated test takers. For an adaptive achievement test, patterns of observed rapid-guessing behavior and item response accuracy were compared to the behavior expected under several types of models that have been proposed to represent unmotivated test taking behavior.
Topics: Measurement & scaling, Growth modeling, School & test engagement
Modeling student test-taking motivation in the context of an adaptive achievement test
This study examined the utility of response timeābased analyses in understanding the behavior of unmotivated test takers. For the data from an adaptive achievement test, patterns of observed rapidāguessing behavior and item response accuracy were compared to the behavior expected under several types of models that have been proposed to represent unmotivated test taking behavior.
Topics: Innovations in reporting & assessment, Measurement & scaling, School & test engagement
Rapidāguessing behavior: Its identification, interpretation, and implications
The rise of computerābased testing has brought with it the capability to measure more aspects of a test event than simply the answers selected or constructed by the test taker. One behavior that has drawn much research interest is the time test takers spend responding to individual multipleāchoice items.
By: Steven Wise
Topics: Measurement & scaling, Innovations in reporting & assessment, School & test engagement