Rating: *****
Tags: Behavioral Sciences, Lang:en
Publisher: Routledge
Added: September 8, 2021
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
This comprehensive
Handbook focuses on the most used polytomous item
response theory (IRT) models. These models help us understand
the interaction between examinees and test questions where
the questions have various response categories. The book
reviews all of the major models and includes discussions
about how and where the models originated, conceptually and
in practical terms. Diverse perspectives on how these models
can best be evaluated are also provided. Practical
applications provide a realistic account of the issues
practitioners face using these models. Disparate elements of
the book are linked through editorial sidebars that connect
common ideas across chapters, compare and reconcile
differences in terminology, and explain variations in
mathematical notation. These sidebars help to demonstrate the
commonalities that exist across the field. By assembling this
critical information, the editors hope to inspire others to
use polytomous IRT models in their own research so they too
can achieve the type of improved measurement that such models
can provide. Part 1 examines the most commonly used
polytomous IRT models, major issues that cut across these
models, and a common notation for calculating functions for
each model. An introduction to IRT software is also provided.
Part 2 features distinct approaches to evaluating the
effectiveness of polytomous IRT models in various measurement
contexts. These chapters appraise evaluation procedures and
fit tests and demonstrate how to implement these procedures
using IRT software. The final section features groundbreaking
applications. Here the goal is to provide solutions to
technical problems to allow for the most effective use of
these models in measuring educational, psychological, and
social science abilities and traits. This section also
addresses the major issues encountered when using polytomous
IRT models in computerized adaptive testing. Equating test
scores across different testing contexts is the focus of the
last chapter. The various contexts include personality
research, motor performance, health and quality of life
indicators, attitudes, and educational achievement. Featuring
contributions from the leading authorities, this handbook
will appeal to measurement researchers, practitioners, and
students who want to apply polytomous IRT models to their own
research. It will be of particular interest to education and
psychology assessment specialists who develop and use tests
and measures in their work, especially researchers in
clinical, educational, personality, social, and health
psychology. This book also serves as a supplementary text in
graduate courses on educational measurement, psychometrics,
or item response theory. **