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Auteur
George Engelhard, Jr. is a professor of educational measurement and policy at the University of Georgia.
Jue Wang is a professor at the University of Science and Technology of China.
Texte du rabat
This is the second edition of an introductory text that describes the principles of invariant measurement; how invariant measurement can be achieved using Rasch measurement theory; and how to use invariant measurement to solve a variety of measurement problems in the social, behavioral, and health sciences.
Contenu
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the authors
Part I: Introduction
Part II: Conceptual and Theoretical Issues
Invariant Measurement
What is measurement?
What is invariant measurement?
Ideal-type scales and the structure of measurement data
What are Rasch Models?
Item-invariant person measurement
Person-invariant item calibration
Discussion and Summary
Rasch Models
Operating characteristic functions
Dichotomous Rasch model
Polytomous Rasch Models
Partial Credit model
Rating Scale model
Many Facet Model
Discussion and Summary
Assessment in the health sciences: The five rights of safe administration of medications
Discussion and summary
Explanatory Item Response Models: De Boeck & Wilson
Discussion and summary
Part III: Technical Issues
Bayesian Estimation Method
Item calibration: Comparison of non-iterative, MLE, and Bayesian methods
Person measurement: Illustrative data analysis of JMLE Method
Discussion and Summary
Model-data fit statistics for dichotomous Rasch Model
Additional issues related to model-data fit
Discussion and Summary
Part IV: Assessments with raters: Rater-invariant measurement
Guidelines for evaluating functioning of rating categories
The Many Facet Rasch Model
Using variable maps with rater-mediated assessments
Discussion and summary
Person Facet
Rater Invariant Measurement
Discussion and Summary
Evaluating the quality of rater-mediated assessments II:
Direct Indices of rater accuracy
What is rater accuracy?
Rater accuracy as the underlying construct
Indices of rating accuracy
Illustrative data analyses
Relationship between rater error and accuracy
Discussion and Summary
Part V: Final Word
References
Glossary (definitions of terms)
Author Index
Subject Index