Standard Error of Measurement: X, S, R S S S R
Standard Error of Measurement: X, S, R S S S R
The simplest, most non-technical way to think of the standard error of measurement is the
following:
If a single student were to take the same test repeatedly (with no new learning taking place
between testings and no memory of question effects), the standard deviation of his/her
repeated test scores is denoted as the standard error of measurement.
What is the difference between the "standard deviation of scores on a test" and the "standard
error of measurement on a test"?
When one refers to the standard deviation of scores on a test, usually he/she is referring to
the standard deviation of the test scores obtained by a group of students on a single test.
It is a measure of the "spread" of scores between students.
When one refers to the standard error of measurement on a test, he/she is referring to the
standard deviation of test scores that would have been obtained from a single student had
that student been tested multiple times. It is a measure of the "spread" of scores within a
student had the student been tested repeatedly.
Since it is highly unlikely that each student would be tested repeatedly on a test in order to
estimate the standard error of measurement, how is the standard error of measurement
estimated?
Fortunately, the standard error of measurement can be estimated from a single testing of a
population of students (e.g. a single TAAS or TAKS administration). From the test scores
of a population of students on a single exam, one can easily compute estimates of the test
score mean, test score standard deviation, and the test score reliability (notated as x , sx,
and rxx, respectively). From these estimates, an estimate of the standard error of
measurement, sE, is computed using the following formula:
sE = sx 1 − rxx