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Book

Differential Item Functioning

Book

Differential Item Functioning

DOI link for Differential Item Functioning

Differential Item Functioning book

Differential Item Functioning

DOI link for Differential Item Functioning

Differential Item Functioning book

Edited ByPaul W. Holland, Howard Wainer
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1993
eBook Published 1 January 1993
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203357811
Pages 470
eBook ISBN 9780203357811
Subjects Behavioral Sciences, Education
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Holland, P.W., & Wainer, H. (Eds.). (1993). Differential Item Functioning (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203357811

ABSTRACT

Test fairness is a moral imperative for both the makers and the users of tests. This book focuses on methods for detecting test items that function differently for different groups of examinees and on using this information to improve tests. Of interest to all testing and measurement specialists, it examines modern techniques used routinely to insure test fairness. Three of these relevant to the book's contents are:

* detailed reviews of test items by subject matter experts and members of the major subgroups in society (gender, ethnic, and linguistic) that will be represented in the examinee population

* comparisons of the predictive validity of the test done separately for each one of the major subgroups of examinees

* extensive statistical analyses of the relative performance of major subgroups of examinees on individual test items.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part I|1 pages

Introduction and Background

chapter 1|21 pages

Perspectives on Differential Item Functioning Methodology: William H. Angoff

chapter 2|5 pages

History and Development of DIF: Nancy S. Cole

part II|3 pages

Statistical Methadology

chapter 3|32 pages

DIF Detection and Description: Mantel-Haenszel and Standardization: Neil J. Dorans and Paul W. Holland

chapter 4|47 pages

Detection of Differential Item Functioning Using the Parameters of Item Response Models: David Thissen, and Lynne Steinberg and Howard Wainer

chapter 5|8 pages

Different DIFs: Comment on the Papers Read by NeiI Dorans and David Thissen: R. Darrell Bock

chapter 6|13 pages

Model-Based Standardized Measurement of an Item's Differential Impact: Howard Wainer

chapter 7|30 pages

A Monte Carlo Study of Factors That Affect the Mantel-Haenszel and Standardization Measures of Differential Item Functioning: John R. Donoghue, and Paul W. Holland, and Dorothy T. Thayer

chapter 8|3 pages

Comments on the Monte Carlo Study of Donoghue, Holland, and Thayer: J. O. Ramsay

chapter 9|26 pages

Stability of the MH D-DIF Statistics Across Populations: Nicholas T. Longford, and Paul W. Holland, and Dorothy T. Thayer

chapter 10|43 pages

An Item Response Theory Model for Test Bias and Differential Test Functioning: Robin T. Shealy William F. Stout

chapter 11|12 pages

A Model for Missing Information About the Group Membership of Exminees in DIF Studies: Nancy L. Allen and Paul W. Holland

part III|2 pages

Practical Questions and Empirical Investigations

chapter 12|22 pages

Item and Test Characteristics That are Associated with Differential Item Functioning: Kathleen A. O'Neill and W. Miles McPeek

chapter 13|3 pages

Comments on the O'Neill & McPeek Paper: Lloyd Bond

chapter 14|35 pages

EvaIuating Hypotheses About Differential Item Functioning: Alicia P. Schmitt, Paul W. Holland, Neil J. Dorans

chapter 15|3 pages

A Note on the Value of Including the Studied Item in the Test Score When Analyzing Test Items for DIF: Charles Lewis

chapter 16|15 pages

The Effect of Item Screening on Test Scores and Test Characteristies: Elizabeth Burton and Nancy W. Burton

chapter 17|11 pages

Practical Questions in the Use of DIF Statistics in Test Development: Michael Zieky

chapter 18|16 pages

The Use of Differential Item Functioning Statistics: A Discussion of Current Practice and Futue Implications: Robert L. Linn

part IV|2 pages

Ancillary Issues

chapter 19|22 pages

Sensitivity Review: The ETS Experience as a Case Study: Paul A. Ramsey

chapter 20|8 pages

Testing, DIF, and Public Policy: Patricia H. McAllister

chapter 21|20 pages

The Case Against Item Bias Detection Techniques Based on Internal Criteria: Do Item Bias Procedures Obscure Test Fairness Issues?: Gregory Camilli

chapter V|4 pages

Concluding Remarks and Suggestions

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