login
-
create an account
-
help
AAPT ComPADRE
Events
Collaborate
About
Contact Us
home
»
Detail Page
» Similar Materials
Materials Similar to
Why normalized gain should continue to be used in analyzing preinstruction and postinstruction scores on concept inventories
46%
:
Interpreting FCI scores: Normalized gain, preinstruction scores, and scientific reasoning ability
45%
:
Identifying a preinstruction to postinstruction factor model for the Force Concept Inventory within a multitrait item response theory framework
39%
:
Analyzing the measurement error from false positives in the Force Concept Inventory
38%
:
Comparison of normalized gain and Cohen’s d for Force Concept Inventory results in an introductory mechanics course
37%
:
Exploring the structure of misconceptions in the Force Concept Inventory with modified module analysis
37%
:
Gender fairness within the Force Concept Inventory
37%
:
Partitioning the gender gap in physics conceptual inventories: Force Concept Inventory, Force and Motion Conceptual Evaluation, and Conceptual Survey of Electricity and Magnetism
36%
:
Performance on In-Class vs. Online Administration of Concept Inventories
35%
:
Generating a growth-oriented partial credit grading model for the Force Concept Inventory
34%
:
What can normalized gain reveal about individual learning on the FCI?
33%
:
Linking and comparing short and full-length concept inventories of electricity and magnetism using item response theory
32%
:
Analyzing Calculus Concept Inventory Gains in Introductory Calculus
32%
:
Analyzing false positives of four questions in the Force Concept Inventory
32%
:
Analysis to Develop Computerized Adaptive Testing with the Force Concept Inventory
31%
:
In-class vs. Online Administration of Concept Inventories and Attitudinal Assessments
30%
:
Force Concept Inventory: More than just conceptual understanding
30%
:
Bias on the Force Concept Inventory across the intersection of gender and race
30%
:
Analyzing Multiple-Choice-Multiple-Response Items Using Item Response Theory
30%
:
Do Concept Inventories Actually Measure Anything?