I'm not sure what you are asking about: cut score? release date?Could it be too hard to figure a passing score if general exam performance was bad or just too good?
I'm not sure what you are asking about: cut score? release date?Could it be too hard to figure a passing score if general exam performance was bad or just too good?
Release date.I'm not sure what you are asking about: cut score? release date?
Six minute rules is an average for taking the test. Not a rule per se for the exam designers. Some questions are meant to eat time.I would hope the questions pass the 6 minutes rule and difficulty standard before giving it out.
Why set questions with more than one answers?
Could it be too hard to figure a passing score if general exam performance was bad or just too good?
I'm not aware of any correlation between ease/difficultly of exam or examinee performance, and release date. Once the "cut score" is determined during the 'cut score' or 'exam standard setting' meeting it is used going forward for those exam problems. The cut score is based on what an average PE would score not how a given group of (non-PE) examinees perform in a cycle.Release date.
That's not what I meant. Sometimes a lot of test takers who pass choose between two choices and if NCEES determines that the question is unclear they can give credit to both choices. I believe this has happened before. For this reason it's hard to say exactly what the cut score is. If you are less than 56/80 it's guaranteed you will fail. If you are at 56 then it's borderline. 57 or 58 I believe is comfortable territory.I would hope the questions pass the 6 minutes rule and difficulty standard before giving it out. Why set questions with more than one answers?
They started the "cut score" because that's where they separate the failure from the success.. Like using a pair of scissors and decide to cut that line.. Thus Cut Score...I can't believe this is the first topic in the hot April 2018 thread. I think using the term "Passing" score gives a more positive feeling. Who started the term "cut" score anyway.
We are not playing golf here, but I'd like a few mulligans.
What is the EE??But I don't think it works the other way. I mean WHY would anyone voluntarily take the EE?
Was it ever established the scoring method isnt a bunch of drunk hooligans getting together at "exam setting meetings" playing darts?Has it ever been established that a 57/80 is actually a nominal count of 57 and not some scaled equivalent?
Of couse! "hooligans" and "darts" is a British thing. This is 'Merica! So obviously that's false.Was it ever established the scoring method isnt a bunch of drunk hooligans getting together at "exam setting meetings" playing darts?
fify, and noWas it ever established the scoring method isnt a bunch of drunks on vacationhooligansgetting together at "exam setting meetings"playing dartsshooting dice?
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