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The Predictive Value of an English Achievement Test for Grades in Modern Foreign LanguagesBarnard, William Kenneth 01 1900 (has links)
This study has as its objectives: (1) the determination of the degree of relationship between achievement in the study of English as measured by a standardized English achievement test and achievement in the study of foreign languages as measured by teacher's grades; (2) the determination of the amount of contribution to such a relationship of the achievement in various functional areas in the study of English as measured by the subtests of the English achievement test.
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Effect of Anxiety on Achievement Test Scores of Children in the Sixth GradeBooth, Dorothy J. (Dorothy Johnson) 06 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the present study will be to test the relation between Test Anxiety Scores and Stanford-Achievement Test scores and to determine whether there sill be differences of significant values within the sub-tests on the achievement tests.
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A correlational study of the Wide-Range Achievement Test and the Peabody Individual Achievement Test with mentally retarded childrenMcDonaugh, Karen Jean, January 1971 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1971. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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A comparison of the Effects of Different Sizes of Ceiling Rules on the Estimates of Reliability of a Mathematics Achievement TestSomboon Suriyawongse 05 1900 (has links)
This study compared the estimates of reliability made using one, two, three, four, five, and unlimited consecutive failures as ceiling rules in scoring a mathematics achievement test which is part of the Iowa Tests of Basic Skill (ITBS), Form 8. There were 700 students randomly selected from a population (N=2640) of students enrolled in the eight grades in a large urban school district in the southwestern United States. These 700 students were randomly divided into seven subgroups so that each subgroup had 100 students. The responses of all those students to three subtests of the mathematics achievement battery, which included mathematical concepts (44 items), problem solving (32 items), and computation (45 items), were analyzed to obtain the item difficulties and a total score for each student. The items in each subtest then were rearranged based on the item difficulties from the highest to the lowest value. In each subgroup, the method using one, two, three, four, five, and unlimited consecutive failures as the ceiling rules were applied to score the individual responses. The total score for each individual was the sum of the correct responses prior to the point described by the ceiling rule. The correct responses after the ceiling rule were not part of the total score. The estimate of reliability in each method was computed by alpha coefficient of the SPSS-X. The results of this study indicated that the estimate of reliability using two, three, four, and five consecutive failures as the ceiling rules were an improvement over the methods using one and unlimited consecutive failures.
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The Development of a Mathematics Achievement Test For the Seventh Graders in Tainan City Based on the Grade 1-9 CurriculumHuang, Guo-chin 07 December 2004 (has links)
The purposes of this study were to develop a mathematics achievement test for the seventh graders in Tainan based on the Grade 1-9 Curriculum, and to explore the difference in performance for variables of gender, tutoring, scale of school, public-private school and textbook version.
The population of this study consisted of the eight graders in Tainan City. Three samples were drawn for this study: the first tryout sample¡]n=402¡^, the second tryout sample¡]n=455¡^and the norm sample¡]n=870¡^. The Mathematics Achievement Test for Seventh Graders developed by the researcher was used. The data were analyzed in two dimensions: 1. items and test with methods of CTT and IRT; and 2. the difference in performance for variables of gender, tutoring, scale of school, public-private school and textbook version with statistical testing methods.
The results of this study were listed below:
I. Item and Test Analysis:
1.Regarding the difficulty and discrimination of CTT, the average difficulty of interval scale¡]¡µ¡^of items was 12.14, the mean of percentage passing and discrimination were 0.58 and 0.52, respectively.
2.According to the result of the reliability examination, the Cronbach value of internal consistency was 0.85, the test-retest reliability indicated 0.86, the split-half reliability showed 0.86.
3.The evidences of validity about this test were well content-related, criterion-related, construct-related. As for the result of the validity examination, the content validity of this test was through experts¡¦ review and judgment. The criterion validity was based on significantly positive correlation of the monthly test scores for each school. The construct validity had established in two ways of the internal consistency and the different groups analysis.
4.Analyzing items with IRT, 3PL model, the mean of discrimination (a), difficulty (b) and guessing(c) are 1.23, 0.14 and 0.21, respectively.
5. DIF was present for the item 17 between gender groups.
6. The correlations of item difficulty values between IRT and CTT were 0.97¡ã1.00, the correlations of item discrimination were 0.21¡ã0.95. The correlation between ability parameters of IRT model and total score of CTT ranged from 0.98 to 1.00. The result of indices between IRT and CTT revealed high correlations.
7. This test established a percentile rank and T-score norms.
II. Testing of the performance differences with significance level£\=0.01:
1.The student¡¦s performances were significantly different between gender groups, and the female exceeded male.
2.The performances of the students who accepted tutoring after school hours were better than the others¡¦ performances significantly.
3. The student¡¦s performances in the public and private school were significantly different, and the private school outperformed the public school.
4.The performances of the students in private school were better than the performances of the students¡]both accepting tutoring and not ¡^in public school. And in public school, the performances of the students accepting tutoring were better than the students not accepting tutoring.
5.As for the school scale, the large is better than the small, and the middle is better than the small at statistical significant level.
6.In the textbook version, this test found that the performance of student using the version Nani surpassed the performance of student using the version Hanlin, and the version Jenlin outshined the version Hanlin.
Finally, based on the results and findings of this study, numerous suggestions for the practical use of the test and future researches were provided.
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A comparison of scores and content on the 1964 edition of the Stanford Achievement Test with scores and content on the 1973 edition of the Stanford Achievement Test for students in Christian schoolsHunter, Brenda Buckley. January 1979 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Tennessee Temple University, 1979. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 47).
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High-stakes testing and the gender gap a study of fourth grade reading performance on the Ohio Achievement Test /Wargacki, Jennine Elise. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--Bowling Green State University, 2008. / Document formatted into pages; contains vii, 58 p. Includes bibliographical references.
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EVALUATING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE PEAK RELATIONAL TRAINING SYSTEM DIRECT ASSESSMENTS AND THE KAUFMAN TEST FOR EDUCATIONAL ACHIVEMENT IIICepeda, Alysse 01 May 2018 (has links)
The purpose of the current study was to determine the relationship between the PEAK Relational Training System Assessments and the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement, Third Edition long form in children with autism and other cognitive or language delays. 29 participants were administered the PEAK Relational Training System Battery of Assessments and the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement. This study sought to extend previous literature examining the validity of PEAK Assessments as compared to previously validated assessments as well as add to the body of literature examining the relationship between academic achievement and language and cognition development. Understanding the interaction between verbal behavior skills, derived relational responding, and academic skills may enable clinicians and educators to serve their learners in a more effective, comprehensive way. The results of this study suggest there is a moderately strong, statistically significant relationship between the PEAK assessments and the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement Academic Skills Battery Composite (r=0.6675, p<0.0001, R2=.4455) and a strong, statistically significant relationship with the Kaufman Brief Achievement Composite (r=0.7974, p<0.0001, R2=.5611).
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A Comparative Study of the Effect of Paper-and-Pencil Versus Computer Administration of an Achievement TestSailor, Perry 01 May 1994 (has links)
The study examined whether, under comparable testing conditions, second - v and fourth-grade students who took a computer-administered (CA) achievement test in mathematics achieved the same mean score as comparable students who took the same test by paper and pencil (PP).
For number correct, the CA standardized mean difference effect size was - 0 .28, which was larger than the expected effect size of zero, although not statistically significant at. 05. It was noted that CA subjects completed the test more quickly, on the average, than PP subjects (CA effect size for time to completion = - 0. 79). When time to completion was statistically controlled, the difference in mean scores between CA and PP modes vanished (CA effect size = - 0.02).
Possible explanations for the findings are discussed. It is concluded that, based on these results, one would not be justified in assuming CA and PP scores from elementary school students to be equivalent.
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Factors Related to Academic Achievement in a Sunshine RoomNickles, Dorothy Deane 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to determine the relationships between various factors and the academic achievement
of the children in the sunshine Room established at Diamond Hill, Fort Worth, Texas. The factors under consideration are health improvements, behavior ratings obtained from the use of a rating scale and intelligence quotients.
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