A Comparison of Experimental and Observational Approaches to Assessing the Effects of Time Constraints in a Medical Licensing Examination

Test administrators are appropriately concerned about the potential for time constraints to impact the validity of score interpretations; psychometric efforts to evaluate the impact of speededness date back more than half a century. The widespread move to computerized test delivery has led to the de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of educational measurement 2018-06, Vol.55 (2), p.308-327
Hauptverfasser: Harik, Polina, Clauser, Brian E., Grabovsky, Irina, Baldwin, Peter, Margolis, Melissa J., Bucak, Deniz, Jodoin, Michael, Walsh, William, Haist, Steven
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container_end_page 327
container_issue 2
container_start_page 308
container_title Journal of educational measurement
container_volume 55
creator Harik, Polina
Clauser, Brian E.
Grabovsky, Irina
Baldwin, Peter
Margolis, Melissa J.
Bucak, Deniz
Jodoin, Michael
Walsh, William
Haist, Steven
description Test administrators are appropriately concerned about the potential for time constraints to impact the validity of score interpretations; psychometric efforts to evaluate the impact of speededness date back more than half a century. The widespread move to computerized test delivery has led to the development of new approaches to evaluating how examinees use testing time and to new metrics designed to provide evidence about the extent to which time limits impact performance. Much of the existing research is based on these types of observational metrics; relatively few studies use randomized experiments to evaluate the impact time limits on scores. Of those studies that do report on randomized experiments, none directly compare the experimental results to evidence from observational metrics to evaluate the extent to which these metrics are able to sensitively identify conditions in which time constraints actually impact scores. The present study provides such evidence based on data from a medical licensing examination. The results indicate that these observational metrics are useful but provide an imprecise evaluation of the impact of time constraints on test performance.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jedm.12177
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects Comparative Analysis
Computerization
Evidence
Licensing
Licensing Examinations (Professions)
Medical Education
Observation
Physicians
Psychometrics
Randomized Controlled Trials
Scores
Test Validity
Time limits
Timed Tests
title A Comparison of Experimental and Observational Approaches to Assessing the Effects of Time Constraints in a Medical Licensing Examination
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