Publication | Closed Access
Instructional Sensitivity of a State's Standards-Based Assessment
43
Citations
21
References
2007
Year
Teacher EducationStudent AssessmentTest DevelopmentAchievement DifferencesTeacher EvaluationEducationInstructional SensitivitySpecial EducationSensitivity RequirementsClassroom AssessmentEducational EvaluationEducational AssessmentTest ScoresPsychologyProgram Evaluation
Abstract The accuracy of achievement test score inferences largely depends on the sensitivity of scores to instruction focused on tested objectives. Sensitivity requirements are particularly challenging for standards-based assessments because a variety of plausible instructional differences across classrooms must be detected. For this study, we developed a new method for capturing the alignment between how teachers bring standards to life in their classrooms and how the standards are defined on a test. Teachers were asked to report the degree to which they emphasized the state's academic standards, and to describe how they taught certain objectives from the standards. Two curriculum experts judged the alignment between how teachers brought the objectives to life in their classrooms and how the objectives were operationalized on the state test. Emphasis alone did not account for achievement differences among classrooms. The best predictors of classroom achievement were the match between how the standards were taught and tested, and the interaction between emphasis and match, indicating that test scores were sensitive to instruction of the standards, but in a narrow sense.
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