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Design patterns for assessing science inquiry

by: Robert J. Mislevy, Larry Hamel, Ron Fried, Thomas Gaffney, Geneva Haertel, Amy Hafter, Robert Murphy, Edys Quellmalz, Anders Rosenquist, Patricia Schank, Karen Draney, Cathleen Kennedy, Kathy Long, Mark Wilson, Naomi Chudowsky, Alissa L. Morrison, Patricia Pena, Nancy Butler Songer, and Amelia Wenk
, Nr. 1 (January 2003) .
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Abstract

Designing systems for assessing inquiry in science requires expertise across domains that rarely reside in a single individual: science content and science learning, assessment design, task authoring, psychometrics, delivery technologies, and systems engineering. The goal of the PADI project is to provide a conceptual framework for designing inquiry tasks that coordinates such efforts, and provides supporting tools to facilitate them. This paper reports progress on one facet of PADI: design patterns for assessing science inquiry. Design patterns bridge knowledge about key aspects of science inquiry and the structures of a coherent assessment argument, in a form that will guide task authoring and implementation specifications. We discuss the nature and role of design patterns in assessment design, suggest contents and structures for creating and working with them, and illustrate the ideas with a small start-up set of design pattern

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