Using Objective Data Sources to Enhance Teacher Judgments about Test Accommodations
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Exceptional Children
- Vol. 67 (1) , 67-81
- https://doi.org/10.1177/001440290006700105
Abstract
One hundred eighty-one students with learning disabilities (LD) and 184 students without LD completed four brief, parallel tests under four conditions (standard, extended time, large print, students reading aloud). We (a) examined whether students with LD benefited from accommodations more than students without LD; (b) estimated “typical” accommodation boosts among nondisabled students; and (c) awarded accommodations to students with LD whose boosts exceeded the “typical” boost. Teachers provided independent accommodation judgments, and students with LD completed a large-scale assessment with and without accommodations. Students with LD, as a group, profited differentially from reading aloud, not from extended time or large print; teachers' decisions did not correspond to benefits students derived; the data-based assessment predicted differential performance on large-scale assessment better than teacher judgments.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Supplementing Teacher Judgments of Mathematics Test Accommodations with Objective Data SourcesSchool Psychology Review, 2000
- Subtypes of reading disability: Variability around a phonological core.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
- High-Stakes Testing Accommodations: Validity Versus Disabled RightsApplied Measurement in Education, 1994
- Effect of Speededness on Test Performance of Handicapped and Nonhandicapped ExamineesThe Journal of Educational Research, 1991
- Short-term retention of discourse during reading.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980