Steps in Test Construction
Steps in Test Construction
Steps in Test Construction
Presented by,
PRIYA PARVATHI.P
General steps for test construction
• Decides upon :
3. Method of sampling
5. Detailed arrangement for the preliminary administration and
the final administration.
6. Probable length and time limit for the completion of the test.
• Writer must cultivate rich source of ideas for items (ideas are
not produced automatically; ideas require certain factors or
stimuli).
DEVEENA ANTO
Reliability of the test
• When on the basis of the experimental or
empirical try out the test is finally composed
of the selected items, the final test is again
administered on a fresh sample in order to
compute the reliability coefficient.
• The size of the sample should not be less than
100.
• It is the self-correlation test
• It indicates the consistency of the scores in the
test.
• 3 common ways of calculating reliability
coefficient – test-retest method, split-half
method, & equivalent-form method.
• Besides these, the Kuder Richardson formulas
& the Rulan formula are also used.
Validity of the Test
• Refer to what the test measures & how well it
measures.
• If a test measures a trait that it intends to
measure well , we say that the test is valid one.
• After estimating the reliability coefficient of the
test, the test constructor validates the test
against some outside independent criteria by
comparing the test with the criteria. Thus, validity
may also be defined as the correlation of the test
with some outside independent criteria.
• Validity should be computed from the data
obtained from the samples other than those
used in item analysis. This procedure is known
as cross-validation.
• 3 main types- content V, construct V, &
criterion-related V.
• The usual statistical techniques employed in
computing validity coefficient are Pearsonian
r, biserial r, pointbiserial r chi square, phi-
coefficient, etc.
• The abac tables have also been prepared by
Flanagan for directly reading the values of
biserial r, pointbiserial r & phi-coefficient
when the proportions of those passing an
item in the lower group & upper group are
known.
Norms of the Test
• Constructor also prepares norms of the test.
• Norms-the average performance or score of a
large sample representative of a specified
population.
• Norms are prepared to meaningfully interpret the
scores obtained on the test for. The obtained
scores on the test themselves convey no meaning
regarding the ability or a trait being measured.
But when these are compared with the norms, a
meaningful inference can immediately be drawn.
• Types- the age, the grade, the percentile, &
the standard score norms.
• All these types are not suited to all types of
tests.
• Keeping the purpose & type of the test, the
test constructor develops a suitable norm for
the test.
• The preliminary concern in developing norms
are that the sample must be representative of
the true population; it must randomly
selected; & it should preferably represent a
cross section of the population.
Preparation of Manual & Reproduction
of the Test
• Last step in test construction.
• In the manual the test constructor reports the
psychometric properties of the test
administration, the scoring the methods &
time limits, if any, of the test.
• It also includes instructions as well as the
details of arrangement of materials, ie
whether the items have been arranged in
random order or in any other order.
• It should yield information about the
standardization sample, reliability, validity,
scoring as well as practical considerations.
• The test constructor, after seeing the
importance & requirements of the test, finally
orders for printing of the test & the manual.