FLAG - Classroom Assessment Techniques (CATs)

Conceptual Diagnostic Tests    (Screen 3 of 6)

Teaching Goals
  • Learn concepts and terms of a subject.
  • Develop higher-level thinking skills, strategies, and habits.
  • Recognize common misconceptions in order to avoid or change them.


Suggestions for Use

Adopt already-developed, field-tested instruments
Well-established conceptual diagnostic tests (such as the Force Concept Inventory in physics) are: research-grounded, normed with thousands of students at diverse institutions, the product of many hours of interviews to validate distractors, and subjected to intense peer review. Individual faculty are unlikely to match such efforts. You can adopt a test, but you must follow the guidelines for its use for the results to be valid and reliable. Generally that means that you give the assessment as a pre- and post-test, secure the tests, give enough time so that all students can complete all questions, state that it is a diagnostic test and has no effect on grades, and give all items in the order presented on the instrument.

Adopt already-developed test items
You may not wish to give a complete instrument for your classroom assessment. Instead, you can give selected items from a well-developed instrument (Figure 1). While you cannot compare your results to those normed from the complete instrument, this limited use may better match your course goals.

As seen from your location, when is the Sun directly overhead at NOON (so that no shadows are cast)?


A. Every day.
B. On the day of the summer solstice.
C. On the day of the winter solstice.
D. At both of the equinoxes (spring and fall).
E. Never from the latitude of your location.

Figure 1.  Sample item from the Astronomy Diagnostic Test (ADT) version 1 (Zeilik et al., 1998). The correct response is "E".

Develop your own conceptual diagnostic questions
The main advantage with this process is that you can match questions closely to your course goals. You can try out one or two questions at a time; this method will take very little class time and gives you the chance for immediate revision based on feedback from the class. Over a few semesters you can build up a bank of well-constructed items. However, you really need to investigate the research literature before you take this path.


Step-by-Step Instructions

Figure 2.  Gain results from a sample item from the Astronomy Diagnostic Test version 1 (Figure 1). Here we give the normalized gain index for each response. A negative value means that the response declined in choice; a positive value that it increased (E is the correct response). Data from four semesters at the University of New Mexico involving about 700 students.


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