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NORM-REFERENCED VS. CRITERION-REFERENCED TESTING


May 22nd, 2008 by Danielle, Director of Sales and Marketing, Language Testing

You may have had an experience where you took a test for a class, and the instructor showed you the classs results afterwards. The results probably mapped out into the infamous bell-shaped curve, with a few people scoring on the low end of the curve, the majority clustering in the middle, and a few people scoring on the high end. What you may not have known is that this is a normal distribution found in norm-referenced testing. Norm-referenced tests (or NRTs) compare an examinees performance to that of other examinees. Standardized examinations such as the SAT are norm-referenced tests. The goal is to rank the set of examinees so that decisions about their opportunity for success (e.g. college entrance) can be made. Criterion-referenced tests (or CRTs) differ in that each examinees performance is compared to a pre-defined set of criteria or a standard. The goal with these tests is to determine whether or not the candidate has the demonstrated mastery of a certain skill or set of skills. These results are usually pass or fail and are used in making decisions about job entry, certification, or licensure. A national board medical exam is an example of a CRT. Either the examinee has the skills to practice the profession, in which case he or she is licensed, or does not. ALTAs exams, which measure the candidates performance against pre-defined criteria (the performance levels), are also an example of criterion-referenced tests. Based on the passing level set by ALTA or the client, the results can then be used to determine whether or not the candidate meets the performance requirements of the job from a language standpoint.

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