Statistical Assessment of Estimated Transformations in Observed-Score Equating

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Abstract

Equating methods make use of an appropriate transformation function to map the scores of one test form into the scale of another so that scores are comparable and can be used interchangeably. The equating literature shows that the ways of judging the success of an equating (i.e., the score transformation) might differ depending on the adopted framework. Rather than targeting different parts of the equating process and aiming to evaluate the process from different aspects, this article views the equating transformation as a standard statistical estimator and discusses how this estimator should be assessed in an equating framework. For the kernel equating framework, a numerical illustration shows the potentials of viewing the equating transformation as a statistical estimator as opposed to assessing it using equating-specific criteria. A discussion on how this approach can be used to compare other equating estimators from different frameworks is also included.

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Wiberg, M., & González, J. (2016). Statistical Assessment of Estimated Transformations in Observed-Score Equating. Journal of Educational Measurement, 53(1), 106–125. https://doi.org/10.1111/jedm.12103

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