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Clear Results

Date
Journal article

A posterior predictive model checking method assuming posterior normality for item response theory

This study investigated the violation of local independence assumptions within unidimensional item response theory (IRT) models.

By: Megan Kuhfeld

Topics: Growth modeling

2019
Journal article

Positionality in teaching: Implications for advancing social justice

In order to ask students to be vulnerable in talking about how they have been exposed to, and impacted by, society’s messages about race, gender, and sexual identity, we have a responsibility to first demonstrate that vulnerability ourselves. Thus, our work is more about “being” than “doing.” Modeling honest self-assessment allows us to ask students to be reflective about their relationship to power, privilege, and oppression.

By: Angelica Paz Ortiz, Beth Tarasawa, Jack Straton, Noelle Al-Mustaifry, Anmarie Trimble

Topics: Equity

2019
Journal article

Can item response times provide insight into students’ motivation and self-efficacy in math? An initial application of test metadata to understand students’ social emotional needs

This study uses an analytic example to explore whether metadata might help illuminate such constructs. Specifically, analyses examine whether the amount of time students spend on test items (after accounting for item difficulty and estimates of true achievement), and difficult items in particular, tell us anything about the student’s academic motivation and self‐efficacy.

By: James Soland

Topics: School & test engagement, Math & STEM, Social-emotional learning

2019
Journal article

Identifying naturally occurring direct assessments of social-emotional competencies: The promise and limitations of survey and assessment disengagement metadata

In this study we conducted a literature review to investigate whether assessment metadata (typically data relevant to how students behave on a test or survey) can provide information on SEL constructs. Implications of this new source of SEL data for practice, policy, and research are discussed.

By: James Soland, Gema Zamarro, Albert Cheng, Collin Hitt

Topics: School & test engagement, Innovations in reporting & assessment, Social-emotional learning

2019
Journal article

Rethinking summer slide: The more you gain, the more you lose

Megan Kuhfeld draws on data from the 3.4 million students who took the NWEA MAP Growth assessments to find that summer slide is common, but not inevitable. According to the data, the students who experienced the greatest loss were those who made the greatest gains during the previous school year.

By: Megan Kuhfeld

Topics: Equity, Seasonal learning patterns & summer loss

2019
Journal article

A matter of time: variations in high school course-taking by years-as-EL subgroup

This study improves upon previous research by addressing this dimension of heterogeneity and reporting detailed by-subject analyses.

By: Angela Johnson

Topics: Equity, English Language Learners

2019
Journal article

Validating the SEDA measures of district educational opportunities via a common assessment

his study describes a convergent validity analysis of the SEDA growth estimates in mathematics and English Language Arts (ELA) by comparing the SEDA estimates against estimates derived from NWEA’s MAP Growth assessments.

By: Megan Kuhfeld, Thurston Domina, Paul Hanselman

Topics: Equity, Growth modeling, Measurement & scaling

2019
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971.361.9526

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