Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA

This paper provides an analysis of the gender fairness and consequences associated with the test design used for the 2001 Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA) in Trinidad and Tobago. It is argued that the rationale for choosing the SEA test design emphasized the usefulness and purpose of the selection instrument, but failed to consider one significant consequence: the likelihood of adverse impact resulting from large performance differentials in favour of females. The study also tests the hypotheses that gender differences are (1) institution-specific and (2) vary across ability groups. The major findings were that patterns of gender inequity were complex and sometimes even contradictory, with females favoured on SEA composite total score, language arts, and creative writing and males favoured on the placement process. However, males and females performed similarly in mathematics. An analysis across different ability groups indicated that large differentials favouring females were more likely among students below the 50th percentile. On the other hand, among higher achievers, males performed just as well as females. The gender fairness of five alternative SEA test designs was evaluated using Willingham's (1999) social matrix

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: De Lisle, Jerome, Smith, Peter
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine 2004
Subjects:Academic achievement, Student evaluation, Secondary Entrance Assessment examination, Examination results, Gender differences, Primary school students, Test construction, Trinidad and Tobago,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6620
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-66202011-03-03T21:40:15Z Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA De Lisle, Jerome Smith, Peter Academic achievement Student evaluation Secondary Entrance Assessment examination Examination results Gender differences Primary school students Test construction Trinidad and Tobago This paper provides an analysis of the gender fairness and consequences associated with the test design used for the 2001 Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA) in Trinidad and Tobago. It is argued that the rationale for choosing the SEA test design emphasized the usefulness and purpose of the selection instrument, but failed to consider one significant consequence: the likelihood of adverse impact resulting from large performance differentials in favour of females. The study also tests the hypotheses that gender differences are (1) institution-specific and (2) vary across ability groups. The major findings were that patterns of gender inequity were complex and sometimes even contradictory, with females favoured on SEA composite total score, language arts, and creative writing and males favoured on the placement process. However, males and females performed similarly in mathematics. An analysis across different ability groups indicated that large differentials favouring females were more likely among students below the 50th percentile. On the other hand, among higher achievers, males performed just as well as females. The gender fairness of five alternative SEA test designs was evaluated using Willingham's (1999) social matrix 2010-04-15T19:54:57Z 2010-04-15T19:54:57Z 2004 Article De Lisle, J., and Smith, P. (2004). Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA. Caribbean Curriculum, 11, 23-55 1017-5636 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6620 en application/pdf School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
institution UWI TT
collection DSpace
country Trinidad y Tobago
countrycode TT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
language English
topic Academic achievement
Student evaluation
Secondary Entrance Assessment examination
Examination results
Gender differences
Primary school students
Test construction
Trinidad and Tobago
Academic achievement
Student evaluation
Secondary Entrance Assessment examination
Examination results
Gender differences
Primary school students
Test construction
Trinidad and Tobago
spellingShingle Academic achievement
Student evaluation
Secondary Entrance Assessment examination
Examination results
Gender differences
Primary school students
Test construction
Trinidad and Tobago
Academic achievement
Student evaluation
Secondary Entrance Assessment examination
Examination results
Gender differences
Primary school students
Test construction
Trinidad and Tobago
De Lisle, Jerome
Smith, Peter
Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA
description This paper provides an analysis of the gender fairness and consequences associated with the test design used for the 2001 Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA) in Trinidad and Tobago. It is argued that the rationale for choosing the SEA test design emphasized the usefulness and purpose of the selection instrument, but failed to consider one significant consequence: the likelihood of adverse impact resulting from large performance differentials in favour of females. The study also tests the hypotheses that gender differences are (1) institution-specific and (2) vary across ability groups. The major findings were that patterns of gender inequity were complex and sometimes even contradictory, with females favoured on SEA composite total score, language arts, and creative writing and males favoured on the placement process. However, males and females performed similarly in mathematics. An analysis across different ability groups indicated that large differentials favouring females were more likely among students below the 50th percentile. On the other hand, among higher achievers, males performed just as well as females. The gender fairness of five alternative SEA test designs was evaluated using Willingham's (1999) social matrix
format Article
topic_facet Academic achievement
Student evaluation
Secondary Entrance Assessment examination
Examination results
Gender differences
Primary school students
Test construction
Trinidad and Tobago
author De Lisle, Jerome
Smith, Peter
author_facet De Lisle, Jerome
Smith, Peter
author_sort De Lisle, Jerome
title Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA
title_short Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA
title_full Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA
title_fullStr Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA
title_full_unstemmed Reconsidering the consequences: Gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 SEA
title_sort reconsidering the consequences: gender differentials in performance and placement in the 2001 sea
publisher School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6620
work_keys_str_mv AT delislejerome reconsideringtheconsequencesgenderdifferentialsinperformanceandplacementinthe2001sea
AT smithpeter reconsideringtheconsequencesgenderdifferentialsinperformanceandplacementinthe2001sea
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