Publication | Closed Access
Analytic Versus Holistic Scoring of Science Performance Tasks
50
Citations
12
References
1998
Year
ReliabilityCognitive ScienceStudent AssessmentInterreader ConsistencyReading ComprehensionTask PerformancePerformance MeasurePerformance AssessmentScience Performance TasksEducationAnalytic ScoreEducational AssessmentEducational EvaluationScore ReliabilityProgram Evaluation
We conducted 2 studies to investigate interreader consistency, score reliability, and reader time requirements of 3 hands-on science performance tasks. One study involved scoring the responses of students in Grades 5, 8, and 10 on 3 dimensions ("curriculum standards") of performance. The other study computed scores for each of the 3 parts of the Grade 5 and 8 tasks. Both studies used analytic and holistic scoring rubrics to grade responses but differed in the characteristics of these rubrics. Analytic scoring took much longer but led to higher interreader consistency. Nevertheless, when averaged over all the questions in a task, a student's holistic score was just as reliable as that student's analytic score. There was a very high correlation between analytic and holistic scores after they were disattenuated for inconsistencies among readers. Using 2 readers per answer does not appear to be a cost-effective means for increasing the reliability of task scores.
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