Adaptive testing has met with some resistance, but it really works to your advantage.
        
        Adaptive Testing Works for You
        Adaptive testing has met with some resistance, but it really works to your advantage.
        
        
			- By Cyndy Fitzgerald
- June 01, 1999
How can something so right seem so wrong? That might 
        sound like the title of a country western song, but it’s 
        no tune you’ll be hearing those of us at Microsoft 
        sing any time soon. Instead, it sums up the negative reaction 
        we’ve been met with in some quarters to an innovation 
        that only works to your advantage.
      That innovation is computerized adaptive testing (CAT), 
        which Microsoft adopted last fall to deliver many of its 
        MCP exams. CAT has a proud pedigree going back for centuries 
        (although not always with the computer, of course). CAT’s 
        biggest advantage is its greater efficiency. It’s 
        possible for a CAT exam to assess a person’s knowledge 
        in 60 percent of the time required for more traditional 
        tests. For the typical MCP exam, that means a test that 
        used to take up to an hour and three-quarters can now 
        be completed in an hour or less. The exams also offer 
        greater security, because no one candidate sees all the 
        questions.
      CAT works by tailoring each test to the individual exam 
        taker. Examinees all start with an easy-to-moderate question. 
        If they answer the question correctly, they get a more 
        difficult follow-up question. If they answer that question 
        correctly, the difficulty of subsequent questions likewise 
        increases. Conversely, if the second question is answered 
        incorrectly, the following questions will be easier. This 
        process continues only until the CAT determines the candidate’s 
        ability.
      While most test takers appreciate CAT’s benefits, 
        a few have expressed frustration. “These questions 
        are too easy. Everyone will pass,” say some. “The 
        test was too hard and too short. If I got the longer test 
        that my colleague took, I could have passed,” say 
        others. Ironically, both comments are off-base; the percentage 
        of test-takers achieving a passing score hasn’t changed.
      Consider Albert, who gets just 15 questions that are 
        all very hard for him. When Albert answers his first or 
        second question incorrectly, the CAT offers him an easier 
        question. After he fails increasingly easy questions, 
        the computer determines that Albert isn’t going to 
        pass and therefore ends the test.
      Or, consider Barbara. She gets the same number of questions 
        (15), but they seem so easy that she thinks everyone will 
        pass. However, Barbara is answering her personalized set 
        of questions so well that the computer can’t find 
        a question that she can’t answer correctly, and it 
        quickly determines that she’s MCP material.
      Finally, there’s Charlie. Charlie gets many more 
        questions than the others—maybe 25 or more. Is the 
        CAT discriminating against him? No. Charlie’s first 
        few answers—some right, some wrong—give him 
        a border-line score. The computer needs more questions 
        to determine which side of that border he belongs on.
      Some of you have complained that the test doesn’t 
        provide feedback to help improve future performance. That’s 
        because CAT—while accurate at what it’s designed 
        to do—isn’t designed to provide such feedback. 
        Because it uses fewer questions, it would produce misleading 
        feedback results.
      If you still have questions about CAT, we’re still 
        listening. To get in touch with us and to learn more about 
        CAT—including the chance to take a sample test—go 
        to the Microsoft Web site at www.microsoft.com/trainingandservices/
default.asp?PageID=mcp&PageCall=tesinn&SubSite=examinfo. 
        You can write to us with comments at [email protected].
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Cyndy Fitzgerald, Ph.D., is the Manager of the Psychometrics and Research Certification and Skills Assessment Group at Microsoft.