著者
Shizuka Tetsuhito
出版者
日本言語テスト学会
雑誌
日本言語テスト学会研究紀要
巻号頁・発行日
vol.6, pp.108-127, 2004

The purpose of this study was to explore the potential of 'invisible-gap filling' items primarily as an in-house achievement measure of reading-oriented courses and secondarily as a more general overall-ability measure. More specifically, it compared multiple-matching 'invisible-gap filling' items and their 'visible' counterparts in terms of item facility, item discrimination, test reliability, and test validity. Eighty-eight Japanese university 1st year students took a 25-item invisible-gap filling test and its visible counterpart, along with two 25-item c-tests, the combination of which constituted a semester-end examination of a reading-oriented course. The invisible and visible gap filling tests were based on the same passage covered in the course. Target words (i.e., words to fill the gaps) were also the same between the versions, making the salience of the gaps the only difference between the two. Hence, psychometric property differences between these two versions, if any, should be attributed to the gap visibility condition difference. One c-test was created from a passage already covered in class and the other from a new passage. The former served as an achievement criterion while the latter was considered a proficiency criterion. Results indicated that the invisible-gap filling items had (1) lower facility values, (2) higher discriminations, (3) higher reliability, (4) higher validity as an achievement measure, and (5) higher validity as a proficiency measure, than its visible counterpart. Based on these findings, it is contended that invisible gap filling is a technique that can be used to produce reliable and valid achievement tests with relative ease. After discussing possible limitations of the format, two possible modifications are proposed.