Publication | Closed Access
High stakes testing in higher education and employment: Appraising the evidence for validity and fairness.
227
Citations
50
References
2008
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationStudent OutcomePsychologyStudent MotivationManagementMinority Group MembersHigher Education PolicyTest DevelopmentStudent SuccessMotivationEducational TestingEducational MeasurementDeveloped AbilitiesHigher Education ManagementHigher EducationLoaded TestsHigher Education AssessmentEducational AssessmentEducation PolicyAchievement MotivationHigh Stakes
The authors review criticisms commonly leveled against cognitively loaded tests used for employment and higher education admissions decisions, with a focus on large-scale databases and meta-analytic evidence. They conclude that (a) tests of developed abilities are generally valid for their intended uses in predicting a wide variety of aspects of short-term and long-term academic and job performance, (b) validity is not an artifact of socioeconomic status, (c) coaching is not a major determinant of test performance, (d) tests do not generally exhibit bias by underpredicting the performance of minority group members, and (e) test-taking motivational mechanisms are not major determinants of test performance in these high-stakes settings.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1