Predicting Advanced Placement Examination Success from FCAT Scores. Research Brief


Book Description

Advanced Placement courses are offered at M-DCPS for students to acquire college credit or advanced college academic standing. A system has been developed in the past by the College Board to use the PSAT for 10th grade students to estimate their potential for AP Examination success. The same test has recently been applied in this district to 9th graders for the same purpose. In this paper we present an alternative, more reliable, prediction system using Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) scores that is appropriate for the prediction of AP Examination success for both 9th and 10 graders. The prediction system should also prove useful for academic counseling and placement purposes. AP Potential Expectancy Tables are attached. (Contains 2 tables.).




Predicting 10th Grade FCAT Success. Research Brief


Book Description

Florida law requires that students achieve a passing score on the Grade 10 Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) to qualify for a standard high school diploma (Section 1008.22(3)(c)5, Florida Statutes). Students who were administered the Grade 10 FCAT for the first time during the 2002 administrations or later must earn a developmental score of 1926 (SSS passing score of 300) or higher in reading and 1889 (300) or higher for mathematics. Among students taking the 10th Grade FCAT for the first time in 2004, 53% did not achieve passing scores in reading, and 29% did not achieve passing scores in mathematics. Although students are granted many opportunities to retake the tests, any early identification of students in jeopardy of not passing the 10th Grade tests would be a welcome contribution to providing targeted academic remediation to the students most in need. This study addresses an approach to the early identification of students who may be at risk of scoring below the passing score of 300 on their 10th grade FCAT Reading and Mathematics Tests. The two prediction equations in this study each utilize a single predictor: the student's score on the 9th grade FCAT Reading and Mathematics Tests, respectively.




Predicting FCAT Science Scores 2006-07. Research Brief


Book Description

Although students have been taking the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) Science test for a few years, the State has only recently set the achievement-level standards for the Science test. Science will be included in the school grade calculations for the first time in 2006-07. In addition, although no official guidelines exist presently, the FCAT Science scores will also be incorporated in the Adequate Yearly Progress requirements in the near future. With the growing importance of the FCAT Science test, it becomes increasingly desirable to have some way of predicting the performance of students. In other FCAT testing areas, prediction formulas and cutoff scores for success have been developed by this office and made available to schools for several years. However, because the FCAT Science test is relatively new and because it is administered in only Grades 5, 8, and 11, prediction for this test must proceed along different lines. This paper presents the results of an analysis directed toward predicting students' Science scores based on their performance on the FCAT Mathematics test of the previous year.




Predicting FCAT Performance. Research Brief


Book Description

Student scores on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) tests are increasingly being used for administrative purposes. Promotion and placement decisions are largely governed by FCAT performance. Although efforts are made to make the FCAT scores available as soon as possible, for some purposes they are not on hand when needed. Additionally, as the importance of FCAT scores increases, it becomes more desirable to have some kind of early indication of how students are expected to score at each grade level, even before the tests are administered. In response to these growing needs for anticipation of FCAT scores, this paper presents a method for predicting FCAT scores based on the previous year's performance.




Predicting FCAT Science Scores 2007-08. Research Brief


Book Description

Although students have been taking the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) Science test for a few years, the State included the performance on the Science test in the school grade calculations for the first time in 2006-07. Although no official guidelines exist presently, the Science scores may also be incorporated in the NCLB Adequately Yearly Progress requirements in the near future. With the growing importance of the Science test, it becomes increasingly desirable to have some way of predicting the performance of students. In other FCAT testing areas, prediction formulas and cutoff scores for success have been developed by this office and made available to schools for several years. However, because the Science test is relatively new and because it is administered in only Grades 5, 8, and 11, prediction for this test must proceed along different lines. This paper presents the results of an analysis directed toward predicting students' Science scores based on their performance on the FCAT Mathematics test of the previous year. [For the 2006-07 edition of this report, see ED538076.].




An Early Warning System


Book Description

This Research Brief presents a method for predicting 10th grade Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) success from 6th grade FCAT performance. A simple equation provides the most probable single score prediction, and give-or-take error margins define high and low probability zones for expected 10th grade scores. In addition, a double-entry table provides estimates of the probability of success on both the Reading and Mathematics tests in 10th grade. The procedures are presented in an extended analogy to weather predictions.







Differential Prediction And Validity Of Advanced Placement (Ap®{Rpara} For Student Subgroups


Book Description

Concerns over fairness permeates every aspect of the testing enterprise, and one characterization of fairness in testing defined by the Standards (AERA, APA, and NCME, 1999) is a fairness as lack of bias. One important way to study bias in college admission context concerns the degree to which prediction equations are equivalent for different groups. To the extent that the AP variables are used together with admission test scores and previous academic records to predict future academic achievement, it is important to know if members of one group are systematically predicted to obtain lower or higher grades than they actually achieve on the average (Linn, 1990, p. 309). Many studies have investigated differential predictive validity for different groups using high school performance and admission test scores as predictors (Linn, 1990). To this day, minimal research attention has been directed toward differential predictive validity using Advanced Placement (AP) variables as predictors, although policy makers have begun to treat the AP experience as an additional important prerequisite for success in college (Breland et al., 2002). By examining the differential predictive ability of AP variables and controlling for predictor unreliability, we can better understand the extent to which these predictors are biased against particular groups. With this understanding, test users can be informed of the extent to which the inferences drawn from these variables are supported by strong validity evidence regarding fairness in admission. Against this backdrop, the current study examines whether AP exam scores predict the first year GPA and second year retention differently for different groups of ethnicity, gender, parental education level, and language group, controlling for high-school-level variables using hierarchical linear modeling.