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Fatigue during longer high-pressure tests not detrimental to performance_5495

Started by uz56yv23, January 08, 2011, 05:11:52 AM

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The tests were specially constructed for three different durations: 3.5, 4.5 and 5.5 hours.
During the study, the researchers gave 239 freshman college students from the Atlanta area three different versions of the SAT Reasoning Test.
The students received a cash bonus if they beat their previous SAT scores.
High-stakes tests are generally used for admission to college and regulated professions like medicine,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, law and accounting.
Before, during and after each test,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, students completed a questionnaire designed to asses their mood, emotions, confidence, subjective fatigue and more.
They say that test length may not matter, as some people are just plain more likely to feel testing fatigue.
The short-form average score was 1,209 out of a possible 1,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login,600; the standard-form average score was 1,222; and the long-form average score was 1,237.
However,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, despite reporting greater fatigue for longer tests, the students’ average performance for both the standard and long tests was significantly higher than for the short test.
As regards why some test-takers report more fatigue, the researchers say that their personalities come into play here.
The researchers observed that the longer the students worked on a test, the more they reported mental fatigue.
“A difference of 28 points, as shown between the short and long sessions, would be meaningful, especially if a student’s on the borderline for an admission cutoff,” Ackerman said.
Washington, June 1 (ANI): A study report issued by the American Psychological Association says that spending hours taking a high-pressure aptitude test may cause a person to feel mentally fatigued, but it does not necessarily have any adverse affect on test scores.
According to the researchers, there is much to learn about how students regulate their effort to achieve higher scores despite longer test sessions.
The conditions arranged for the test simulated the actual exam, with start times of 8 A.M. on three consecutive Saturdays.
“Fatigue appears to be more about the individual’s expectations of and prior experience with testing than about the length of the test,” Ackerman said.
“The experience of fatigue during testing does not appear to be, in and of itself, detrimental to test performance,” said co-authors Dr. Phillip Ackerman and Ruth Kanfer.
Given the increasing reliance by schools, employers and certification boards on long high-stakes tests, Ackerman and Kanfer hope that knowing that cognitive fatigue probably won’t hurt scores will encourage more students to take these tests, which serve as gateways to opportunity. (ANI)
Reported in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, the study may help overcome the concern that when taking longer tests over several hours in one sitting, students would feel increasingly fatigued, and, in turn, perform worse.

Fatigue during longer high-pressure tests not detrimental to performance
“One possibility is that more students respond to feelings of fatigue by increasing rather than decreasing their effort,” said Ackerman.

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