Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design

The purposes of this dissertation are to compare how different the resulting proficiency estimates are by using two scale maintenance approaches, the horizontal and vertical approaches, in supporting scale stability across grade within form, within grade across forms, and across grades and across fo...

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Main Author: Wang, Xuan
Other Authors: Yarbrough, Donald B.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2655
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4784&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-47842019-10-13T04:39:54Z Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design Wang, Xuan The purposes of this dissertation are to compare how different the resulting proficiency estimates are by using two scale maintenance approaches, the horizontal and vertical approaches, in supporting scale stability across grade within form, within grade across forms, and across grades and across forms, and to thus investigate under which conditions of within-grade variability patterns and examinee sample characteristics one approach is preferable to the other. Since there is no universally accepted growth model in the literature, three different distribution sets were specified and generated with regard to within-grade variability patterns in the simulation data: constant across grades, decreasing variability as grade increases, and increasing variability as grade increases. In addition, two sets of examinee sample characteristics were also specified in the simulation data: small examinee group difference and large examinee group difference. Thus six proficiency distribution conditions were used to generate data in this dissertation. Under the six conditions of proficiency distributions, the performances of the two scale maintenance approaches on the resulting proficiency estimates across multiple forms were the foci in this dissertation. One major implication of this study is that the accuracy in recovering the true examinee proficiencies on the new form across multiple linking appeared to be an interaction among the number of forms or years involved in the linking process, the within-grade variability patterns, and the examinee group differences, but they did not appear to be a function of the maintenance approach implemented. The findings from this study provide important empirical guidance to practitioners on how the vertical scale can be maintained, once a vertical scale is established. If the desired output of a maintained scale is to continue to capture the characteristics of the established scale in terms of grade separation, within-grade variability, and growth implications, the vertical approach appears to be marginally better in achieving these goals. However, the differences observed across three forms are marginal, and in some cases neither approach demonstrates superiority in preserving the same patterns at the baseline scale. Both approaches are able to reasonably well capture the trend of the baseline scale, at least across three forms. 2013-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2655 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4784&context=etd Copyright 2013 Xuan Wang Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaYarbrough, Donald B. Harris, Deborah J. Educational Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Educational Psychology
spellingShingle Educational Psychology
Wang, Xuan
Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
description The purposes of this dissertation are to compare how different the resulting proficiency estimates are by using two scale maintenance approaches, the horizontal and vertical approaches, in supporting scale stability across grade within form, within grade across forms, and across grades and across forms, and to thus investigate under which conditions of within-grade variability patterns and examinee sample characteristics one approach is preferable to the other. Since there is no universally accepted growth model in the literature, three different distribution sets were specified and generated with regard to within-grade variability patterns in the simulation data: constant across grades, decreasing variability as grade increases, and increasing variability as grade increases. In addition, two sets of examinee sample characteristics were also specified in the simulation data: small examinee group difference and large examinee group difference. Thus six proficiency distribution conditions were used to generate data in this dissertation. Under the six conditions of proficiency distributions, the performances of the two scale maintenance approaches on the resulting proficiency estimates across multiple forms were the foci in this dissertation. One major implication of this study is that the accuracy in recovering the true examinee proficiencies on the new form across multiple linking appeared to be an interaction among the number of forms or years involved in the linking process, the within-grade variability patterns, and the examinee group differences, but they did not appear to be a function of the maintenance approach implemented. The findings from this study provide important empirical guidance to practitioners on how the vertical scale can be maintained, once a vertical scale is established. If the desired output of a maintained scale is to continue to capture the characteristics of the established scale in terms of grade separation, within-grade variability, and growth implications, the vertical approach appears to be marginally better in achieving these goals. However, the differences observed across three forms are marginal, and in some cases neither approach demonstrates superiority in preserving the same patterns at the baseline scale. Both approaches are able to reasonably well capture the trend of the baseline scale, at least across three forms.
author2 Yarbrough, Donald B.
author_facet Yarbrough, Donald B.
Wang, Xuan
author Wang, Xuan
author_sort Wang, Xuan
title Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
title_short Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
title_full Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
title_fullStr Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
title_full_unstemmed Linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
title_sort linking across forms in vertical scaling under the common-item nonequvalent groups design
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2013
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2655
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4784&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT wangxuan linkingacrossformsinverticalscalingunderthecommonitemnonequvalentgroupsdesign
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