A conceptual introduction to psychometrics, development, analysis, and application of psychological and educational tests, by G. J. Mellenberg (first edition) – Book summary
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An item score distribution can be described by location (1), dispersion (2) and shape (3). Item difficulty is a parameter in maximum performance tests. More test takers fail on more difficult items. Item attractiveness is a parameter in typical performance tests. More test takers choose attractive items. The item difficulty / item attractiveness is equal to the item mean.
Items with small variances do not contribute much to the overall variance. There is a danger of small variances due to floor / ceiling effects in Likert scales (e.g. items with low attractiveness). Large item correlations result in high reliability. Item discrimination refers to how well a given item can distinguish between people that differ on the underlying construct.
The item-test correlation is the correlation between the scores on a given item and the test scores. Items that discriminate well have a high item-test correlation. It uses the following formula:
It is the sum of item score k for test taker j minus the mean for item k times the test score for test taker j minus the mean of the test score divided by the square root of the sum of the item score k for test taker j minus the item mean for item k squared times the sum of the test score for test taker j minus the mean of the test score squared. In other words, it is the covariance between item k and the test score divided by the standard deviation of item k times the standard deviation of the test score.
The item-rest correlation is the correlation between the scores on a given item and the rest score, the score without that item. It is used because in the item-test correlation, correlation is biased upwards as you are correlating an item with itself. It uses the following formula:
It is the sum of the item score k for test taker j minus the mean for item k times the test score for test taker j without item k minus the mean of the test score without item k divided by the square root of the sum of the item score k minus for test taker j minus the mean for item k squared times the sum of the test score for test taker j without item k minus the mean of the test score without item k squared. In other words, it is the covariance between item k and the test score without that item (rest score) divided by the standard deviation of item k times the standard deviation of the test score without item k (rest score standard deviation).
The item-reliability index uses the following formula:
It is the correlation between item k and the test score times the standard deviation of item k. It uses the item-test correlation and not the item-rest correlation.
The classical difficulty of a dichotomously scored multiple-choice item is the proportion of persons in a population who selected the correct answer to the item. The popularity of a distractor is the proportion of persons in a population who selected the distractor. The item distractor-rest correlation is the correlation between the correct answer / distractor variables and the rest score. A positive distractor-rest correlation indicates that that the distractor tends to attract test takers who have lower true scores than the test takers who selected the correct answer. A negative distractor-rest correlation indicates that the distractor tends to attract test takers who have higher true scores than the test takers who selected the correct answer. A positive distractor-rest correlation is desirable.
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This bundle contains everything you need to know for the exam of Test Theory and Practice for the University of Amsterdam. It uses the book "A conceptual introduction to psychometrics, development, analysis, and application of psychological and educational tests, by G. J
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