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Creating A Multiple Measures Placement System

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Creating A Multiple Measures Placement System An Exercise With Ron Gordon & Armand Brunhoeber The Concept Although test scores may predict failure, they do not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Creating A Multiple Measures Placement System


1
Creating A Multiple Measures Placement System
  • An Exercise
  • With
  • Ron Gordon Armand Brunhoeber

2
The Concept
  • Although test scores may predict failure, they do
    not necessarily predict success.
  • Research shows that students backgrounds,
    environments, and personal habits may have more
    influence on their potential academic success
    than their residual academic skills.
  • Find a way to factor that information into the
    placement decision at testing time.

3
Decision Process
  • Involve Faculty
  • Select Questions
  • How many
  • What variety
  • Select Weight Values
  • Use negative weights?
  • How much possible total weight

4
Select Questions
  • Use enough questions that any one does not have
    undue influence
  • Must be manageable
  • Each weighted answer choice requires an
    additional line in the placement rule
  • Weights must be repeated in each rule segment
  • Questions must, in some way, relate to student
    success.

5
Limits
  • Limit total weight so that background information
    does not allow students to skip a course level
  • Limit number of questions to a manageable number
  • More questions adds to testing time
  • Placement rules can become unmanageable
  • Answer choices must be mutually exclusive and all
    inclusive

6
Example
  • (If Arithmetic, plus all weighted choices is gt
    75 OR
  • Algebra, plus all weighted choices is gt 48)AND
  • (Algebra, plus all weighted choices is lt 65 OR
    Algebra Not Taken) AND
  • (CLM, plus all weighted choices is lt62 OR
  • CLM Not Taken)
  • Then Placement is Elementary Algebra

7
Example, Continued
  • If this rule had 5 questions with 4 weighted
    answer choices each, there would be 80 lines just
    for weights.
  • With too many questions, or too many choices per
    question, rules can become unmanageable

8
Conditional Weights
  • High school accomplishments have limited shelf
    life
  • How much does it matter that a 25-year-old
    student had 2 years of high school algebra?
  • Does it matter that the same 25-year-old student
    works for a surveyor and uses algebra daily?

9
Conditional Weights
  • Young students have not had time to build skill
    usage experience, but their high school
    accomplishments are relevant
  • What older students accomplished in high school
    is less relevant than what they do now.

10
Example
  • How long has it been since you were enrolled in
    high school or other formal educational process?
  • Less than 2 years or still enrolled
  • 2 to 5 years
  • More than 5 but less than 7 years
  • 7 years or more
  • Use high school data for up to 5 years,
    experience for more than 5 years.

11
Assigning Weights
  • Total possible weight should not move student
    more than one level in either direction
  • Set maximum possible weight so a student who
    scores near or above the midpoint of a placement
    range could move up, but one who scores below the
    midpoint could not.
  • Use faculty to select BGQ and assign weight
  • Guide them

12
Multiple Measures Movement Model
13
Sample Question With Weights
  • Which choice below best describes you when you
    read textbooks or other complex information?
  • I usually need to read material several times
    before I understand it well -.01
  • Sometimes I can understand what I read the first
    time, but often I must reread it .00
  • I usually understand what I read if I take notes
    or highlight passages. .01
  • I always understand what I read the first time
    through .02

14
Preparing to Build the System
  • Assign numeric codes to course names
  • Determine which tests will be used for each
    course in each discipline
  • Create cut score Table
  • Create a BGQ weight Matrix

15
Building the System
  • Create Background questions
  • Assign BGQ to groups
  • Create branching profiles
  • Create course groups
  • Create courses and assign to groups List
  • Create majors if used
  • Create placement rules Edit1 Edit2

16
Verify
  • Write most complex rule first
  • Run verify function in branching profile
  • Use several BGQ and score combinations to test
    the placement rule
  • Compute weighted score for each run
  • Try to hit cut scores to test for bad weight or
    answer choice selections

17
Common Errors
  • Unequal weights between rules
  • E.G. A response has .01 weight in one rule and
    -.01 weight in the next rule
  • Misplaced Parentheses
  • The multiple measures weights make the rule
    larger and more difficult to visualize
  • Misuse of AND/OR
  • Misuse of arithmetic operators
  • Wrong answer choice in rule line

18
Troubleshooting
  • From the score report, determine what the
    students weight should be from the BGQ responses
  • Using the weight, compute the weighted score
  • Determine what the placement should be
  • Examine the appropriate rule for errors

19
Computing the Weight 1
Question Response Weight
High English A -.02
Grade English C 0
Goal Import. B .02
Understand Read D .03
Study Time A .01
Total Weight .04
20
Computing the Weight 2
Question Response Weight
High English A -.02
Grade English F -.02
Goal Import. A -.01
Understand Read D .03
Study Time C -.01
Total Weight -.03
21
Computation
  • Score is multiplied by 1 plus the accumulated
    weight.
  • 85 (1.04) 88.4
  • Placement will be based on a score of 88.
  • Example 2
  • 85 (1 -.03) 82.45
  • Placement will be based on a score of 82

22
Creating a Multiple Measures Placement System
  • An exercise with
  • Ron Gordon
  • Armand Brunhoeber
  • Thank you for not throwing things at the
    presenters
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