This study examined the diagnostic accuracy associated with decision making as is typically conducted with curriculum-based measurement (CBM) approaches to progress monitoring. Using previously published estimates of the standard errors of estimate associated with CBM, 20,000 progress-monitoring data sets were simulated to model student reading growth of two-word increase per week across 15 consecutive weeks. Results indicated that an unacceptably high proportion of cases were falsely identified as nonresponsive to intervention when a common 4-point decision rule was applied, under the context of typical levels of probe reliability. As reliability and stringency of the decision-making rule increased, such errors decreased. Findings are particularly relevant to those who use a multi-tiered response-to-intervention model for evaluating formative changes associated with instructional intervention and evaluating responsiveness to intervention across multiple tiers of intervention.
CITATION STYLE
Hintze, J. M., Wells, C. S., Marcotte, A. M., & Solomon, B. G. (2018). Decision-Making Accuracy of CBM Progress-Monitoring Data. Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 36(1), 74–81. https://doi.org/10.1177/0734282917729263
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