LENGTH OF TEXTUAL RESPONSE AS A CONSTRUCT-IRRELEVANT RESPONSE STRATEGY: THE CASE OF SHELL LANGUAGE

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Abstract

The paper applies a natural language computational tool to study a potential construct-irrelevant response strategy, namely the use of shell language. Although the study is motivated by the impending increase in the volume of scoring of students responses from assessments to be developed in response to the Race to the Top initiative, the data for the study were obtained from the GRE® Analytical Writing measure. The functioning of the shell detection computational tool was first evaluated by applying it to a corpus of over 200,000 issue and argument essays and by means of a study to evaluate whether the shell language score agreed with the characterization of shell by two scoring experts. It was concluded that the computational tool worked well. The tool was then used to select essays for rescoring to determine whether the presence of shell language had had an effect on the operational scores they received. We found no evidence that such an effect was present. However, we did find a leniency effect in the operational scores. That is, the essays that were rescored as part of this project received a lower score compared to the operational score. The validity implications of these results are discussed.

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APA

Bejar, I. I., VanWinkle, W., Madnani, N., Lewis, W., & Steier, M. (2013). LENGTH OF TEXTUAL RESPONSE AS A CONSTRUCT-IRRELEVANT RESPONSE STRATEGY: THE CASE OF SHELL LANGUAGE. ETS Research Report Series, 2013(1), i–39. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2333-8504.2013.tb02314.x

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