Title: EDCI 6312 Educational Measurement
1EDCI 6312 - Educational Measurement
- Dr. Reynaldo Ramirez, Jr
- Associate Professor for Secondary and Science
Education
2Course Content
3Know the Math
- Measurement and Scales
- Frequency Distributions
- Measures of Central Tendency
- Percentiles and Norms
- Measures of Variability
- Correlation
- Evaluation and Interpretation of Tests
4Measurement and Scales
- Nominal Scale Numbers are assigned for the sole
purpose of differentiating one object from
another. Example We are having class in Room
2.222 UTBs address is 80 Fort Brown to get to
class most people drove down US 77-83, and so on. - Give me an example.
5Measurement and Scales
- Ordinal Scale A number has the property of
order. The numbers imply direction. They,
however, do not imply the difference between two
objects or events. Example the rank in height of
a basketball team, the order in which runners
cross the finish line, the order in which you
walked in to class tonight, and so on. - Give me an example.
6Measurement and Scales
- Interval Scale Numbers representing equal
distances between observation points on the
scale. For example measures of height, test
scores, measured in terms of number of items
correct, and so on. - Give me an example.
7Measurement and Scales
- Ratio Scale Numbers representing equal
distances between observation points on the scale
from an absolute zero. For example something
twice as long, or half as short, and so on. - Give me an example.
8Frequency Distribution
- Achievement Scores on an English Examination
- 69, 71, 71, 82, 66, 89, 81, 68, 95, 88, 70, 85,
61, 81, 88, 94, 79, 81, 75, 97, 72, 72, 85, 74,
82, 86, 93, 64, 84, 86, 62, 73, 82, 79, 86, 76,
76, 87, 90, 68, 78, 91, 82, 90, 83, 75, 80, 80,
92, 67.
9Frequency Distribution
- Which is the highest and lowest score?
- 69, 71, 71, 82, 66, 89, 81, 68, 95, 88, 70, 85,
61, 81, 88, 94, 79, 81, 75, 97, 72, 72, 85, 74,
82, 86, 93, 64, 84, 86, 62, 73, 82, 79, 86, 76,
76, 87, 90, 68, 78, 91, 82, 90, 83, 75, 80, 80,
92, 67.
10Highest to Lowest Distribution
- Highest Score 97
- Lowest Score 61
- What else do we know?
11What Can the Data Tell Us?
- Which is the highest and lowest score?
- Which score comes up most often?
- Which score is in the middle?
- Which score comes up the least?
- What is the normal distribution of the scores?
12Grouped Frequency Distributions
- Group data into intervals (5 or 10)
- Note the highest and lowest scores
- Include the high and low scores within the
interval
Interval Tally Frequency 90-99
//// /// 8 80-89 //// //// ////
//// 20 70-79 //// ////
//// 14 60-69 //// /// 8
N 50
13Grouped Frequency Distributions
- Group data into intervals of 5
Interval Tally Frequency 95-99
// 2 90-94 //// / 6 85-89
//// /// 8 80-84 //// //// //
12 75-79 //// //
7 70-74 //// // 7 65-69 ////
5 60-64 /// 3 N 50
14Simple Frequency Distribution
- Group data into intervals of 1
15Histogram of English Scores
- Lay out an area on a piece of graph paper that
corresponds to a three-fourths ratio of height to
width. - Draw a horizontal line. Label it, the x-axis,
Scores. - At the left end of the x-axis draw a vertical
line, y-axis, calling it Frequency. - Complete the histogram by drawing lines parallel
to the height represented by the frequency for
each interval.
16Frequency Polygon of English Scores
- Label the frequency polygon as you did the
Histogram. - Place a dot at the midpoint of each interval.
- Connect the extremes at the midpoint of the
adjacent interval.
17Practice Items on Blackboard
18Measures of Central Tendency
- Arithmetic Mean or Mean The sum of all scores
divided by the number of scores. - Mode The most frequent score.
- Median The score (point) that denotes the
separation between the upper half of the
distribution from the lower half.
19Calculation of the Mean
- Individual X
- A 2
- B 7
- C 8
- D 6
- E 3
- F 6
- G 2
- H 3
- I 8
- J 5
- N10 SX 50
20Calculation of the Individual Deviation
- Individual Score X
- Individual Deviation Score x
- Calculation for x
- x X - M
For Individual A x X M x 2 5 x -3
For Individual B x X M x 7 5 x 2
and so on
21Calculation of the Mode
- X
- 24
- 23
- 22
- 21
- 21
- 21
- 21
- 20
- 19
- 19
- 19
- 18
- 17
- 16
Principal Mode 21 Secondary Mode 19
22Calculation of the Median (N is odd)
- X
- 16
- 15
- 15
- 14
- 14
- 13
- 12
- 10
- 9
- N 9
5th score from the bottom
5th score is 14
23Calculation of the Median (N is Even)
- X
- 15
- 14
- 14
- 13
- 12
- 10
- 9
- 8
- 6
- 3
- N 10
5.5th score from the bottom
Median 11
24Which measure of Central Tendancy is the best to
use?
- Mode is not very useful.
- Mean is most often used.
- Median helps during situations when extreme
scores exaggerate the mean.
25Grouped Data TechniquesA BETTER ILLUSTRATION OF
THE GROUPED FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION FOR THE
ENGLISH ACHIEVEMENT SCORES
N No. of observations f The frequency i
Size of the interval L exact lower limit of
any interval Mp the midpoint of any interval
Interval Frequency (f) 95-99 2 90-94
6 85-89 8 80-84 12 75-79
7 70-74 7 65-69 5 60-64 3 N 50
26Grouped Data TechniquesCALCULATIONS OF THE MEAN
FOR BIOLOGY SCORES, GROUPED DATA
Scores f d fd 85-89 1 3 3 80-84
3 2 6 75-79 6 1 6 15 70-74
15 0 65-69 12 -1 -12 60-64 8 -2 -16 55-59
3 -3 -9 50-54 2 -4 -8 -45 N
50 Sfd 30
Sfd N
Formula for the mean M Mp i
27Grouped Data TechniquesCALCULATIONS OF THE MEAN
FOR BIOLOGY SCORES, GROUPED DATA
28Grouped Data TechniquesCALCULATIONS OF THE
MEDIAN FOR GEOGRAPHY QUIZ SCORES, GROUPED DATA
Scores f Calculations 75-79 2 (a) 50 of
54 27 70-74 4 65-69 8 (b) 2 3 6
15 26 60-64 14 55-59 15 (c)
R 27 26 1 50-54 6 45-49 3 (d) F50
14 40-44 2 N 54 (e) L 59.5
29Grouped Data TechniquesCALCULATIONS OF THE
MEDIAN FOR GEOGRAPHY QUIZ SCORES, GROUPED DATA
30Next Week
- Percentiles and Norms
- Chapter 1 Educational Testing and Assessment
Context, Issues, and Trends - Maybe Measures of Variability