Lynch School of Education
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TITLE:
Performance Differences According to Test Mode and Computer Familiarity on a Practice GRE
AUTHOR(S):
Amie Goldbert, Boston College
Joseph Pedulla, Boston College
DOCUMENT TYPE: Article
- Download the Document (PDF format - 232 K) - April 2002
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ABSTRACT:
Ideally, test performance is unrelated to the mode under which one administers
the test. This study investigated relationships between test mode (paper-and-pencil vs.
computerized-with-editorial-control, and computerized-without-editorial-control)
and computer familiarity (lower, moderate, and higher) with test performance on the
Graduate Record Exam (GRE). The GRE test was administered to 222 undergraduate
students who were stratified by gender, then randomly assigned to a test mode
group. With self-reported GPA as a covariate in a MANCOVA, the authors found
that examinees in the paper-and-pencil group outperformed the computerized-without-
editorial-control group on all subtests. The computerized-with-editorial-control
group outperformed the computerized-without-editorial-control group on the Analytical
subtest only. The authors also found a significant main effect for computer
familiarity on the Analytical and Quantitative subtests. A significant interaction
between computer familiarity and test mode on the Quantitative subtest confounded
the main effect for that subtest. The subtests were dramatically more speeded in the
computerized forms. Results emphasize the importance of evaluating time constraints
when converting exams from paper-and-pencil to computer-delivery.
