Abstract

This study was designed to research the question of scrambling item content in the construction of achievement tests, so that very general implications could be drawn for both examinee and item populations. To achieve this generality, the methodology of multiple matrix sampling was combined with a simple two group experimental design: a random group of 8th graders responded to mathematics, science, social studies, reading, and language arts achievement items organized in a scrambled (random) test format, while another random group responded to the same items organized in a fixed (segregated by subject matter) test format. The results indicated that scrambling cognitive test items has minimal or no effect on mean examinee test performance or on any of the other parameters included in the analysis.

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