Abstract
The quality of exams drives test-taking behavior of exam- inees and is a proxy for the quality of teaching. As most university exams have strict time limits, and speededness is an important measure of the cognitive state of examinees, this might be used to assess the connection between exams’ quality and examinees’ performance. The practice of randomization within university exams enables the analysis of item position effects within individual exams as a measure of speededness, and as such it enables the creation of a measure of the quality of an exam. In this research, we use generalized linear mixed models to evaluate item position effects on response accuracy and response time in a large dataset of randomized exams from Utrecht University. We find that there is an effect of item position on response time for most exams, but the same is not true for response accuracy, which might be a starting point for identifying factors that influence speededness and can affect the mental state of examinees.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Educational Data Mining |
Number of pages | 7 |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2021 |
Keywords
- exam quality
- computerized testing
- item response time
- item position effect
- speededness
- cognitive state
- speed-accuracy trade-off