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Methodological aspects related to establishing minimum standards for performance

This article explores the methodological aspects related to establishing minimum standards for performance, including different approaches, terminology, and challenges. It examines the use of standards in various fields such as manufacturing, health, environment, and education.

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Methodological aspects related to establishing minimum standards for performance

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  1. Methodological aspects related to establishing minimum standards for performance Jean-Guy Blais Université de Montréal Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  2. Standards • What is a standard ? • Just enough • Average • Excellence • All of the above Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  3. Standards Manufacturing quality standard Health standards Environmental standards Educational standards Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  4. Standards • Education • Systems, schools, teachers and students • Nowadays • Explicit and public standards • Large-scale assessment • Minimal standards for all : NCLB / AYP • Fairness and accomodation • Performance standards and tasks Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  5. Standards Related terminology / research: • Mastery assessment • Criterion-referenced measurement • Cut-off scores • Classification Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  6. Standards • System’s Goals and student’s competencies • Values • Reforms / trends • Standards • Test items / Performance tasks • Ratings of accomplished tasks according to standards • Scoring model / scoring scale • Compensatory model • Conjunctive model • Decision / Consequences • Report • Press / TV… Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  7. Standards Hambleton 1980 : 16 methods • Judgmental • Empirical • Combination «…a point on a test score scale that is used to sort examinees into two categories that reflect different level of proficiency…» Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  8. Standards • Jaeger 1989 • Examinee centered • Test centered • Kane 1994: «…the performance standard is defined as the minimally adequate level of performance, …, it is the conceptual version of the desired level of competence, and the passing score is the operational version.» • Berk 1995 : 20 methods • Applied Measurement in Education, 1995 8(1): 50 methods Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  9. Hambleton & Pitoniak 2006 : 25 methods • Review of items and scoring rubric • Review of candidates • Review of candidate’s work • Review of scores profiles • Cizek & Bunch 2007 : 15 methods «…the process of establishing one or more cut scores on examinations.» • Procedural process / sound technically • Substantive process / fair decision Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  10. Standards Generic steps (Cisek & Bunch 2007) • Choose a method • Performance level labels / descriptions • Select a panel • Train participants • Compile ratings / more than one round • Review / consensus • Document the process / Validity Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  11. Standards • Many studies, many reviews, 1978-2007: • Regression and correlation studies • Generalizability studies • IRT studies • Rasch studies • Main feature : human judgment Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  12. Standards Many methods… Different methods….different results !! Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  13. Standards • Brennan 1996: Performance tasks / GStudy • Task reliability is relatively small • Equating scores on different performance tasks is difficult • Rater reliability/consistency is not always good • Haertel and Linn 1996 : • «Equating test score when examinees choose which problems to attempt depends on strong untestable assumptions.» Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  14. Standards • Resnick and Resnick 1996 : • «Because the learning of skills and concepts is partly constrained by social contingencies and partly constrained by the curriculum and the instructional process, definition of standards will always be a mixture of our understanding of the learning process and our values.» Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  15. Standards • ….«Much of the research and at least 30 years of operational standard setting studies lead to one conclusion: making judgements about item difficulties is neither natural nor can panellists be trained readily to make these judgments.» • Hand 1997 : • «What is the best classification rule ? The answer is it depends.» Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  16. Standards • Cizek & Bunch 2007: • «The same methods used with equivalent groups of participants can produced different cut scores, sometimes very different.» • The challenge of vertical scaling (equating, linking): • Is there a continuous developmental construct across grades ? • The further is the linking between grades the more hazardous are the results. • The challenge of alternate assessments. Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  17. Standards • G.Stone 1996-2004-2006 : Rasch model • «Individual are not very good at establishing what examinees should know or be able to do.» • Theoretical inconsistencies • Standards should be about content not scores. • «Traditional standards cannot be expressed qualitatively, confronting the validity of meaning and the validity of score.» Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  18. Standards • «(methods…) fail to meet goals of judge agreement and fail to produce reproducible standards.» • «Judges are asked to perform a task that is too difficult and confusing.» • Estimate the probability of a minimally competent person to do something successfully. • «Standards defined by judge panels are inexorably connected to their normative experiences and are therefore wholly sample dependent.» Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  19. Standards • Blais 2004-2007 : Qualitative standards • Qualitative standards are more intuitive but they overlap, like tectonic plaques in a way. Like in the real world of evaluation/assessment. • Personal development is not linear and do not occur at the same rate for everyone. Yearly standards should overlap, but yearly programme content does not overlap a lot. • There is no free lunch. Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  20. Standards / Conclusion Relative standards, contextual standards; are they fixed for life ? How long will they stand in a world moving fast forward ? When do we have to review them ? Each year ? Every five years ? Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  21. Standards / Conclusion Much of the controversy over standard setting in education is centered around disputes over what is or should be in the best interest of the public Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

  22. Standards / Conclusion «How much does the past shape the future» B. Mandelbrot Neuchâtel / J.-G Blais january 2008

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