@article {24, title = {Confidence in pass/fail decisions for computer adaptive and paper and pencil examinations}, journal = {Evaluation and the Health Professions}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, year = {1992}, note = {Sage Publications, US}, pages = {453-464}, abstract = {Compared the level of confidence in pass/fail decisions obtained with computer adaptive tests (CADTs) and pencil-and-paper tests (PPTs). 600 medical technology students took a variable-length CADT and 2 fixed-length PPTs. The CADT was stopped when the examinee ability estimate was either 1.3 times the standard error of measurement above or below the pass/fail point or when a maximum test length was reached. Results show that greater confidence in the accuracy of the pass/fail decisions was obtained for more examinees when the CADT implemented a 90\% confidence stopping rule than with PPTs of comparable test length. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2002 APA, all rights reserved).}, author = {Bergstrom, Betty A. and Lunz, M. E.} }