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TIMSS COVERAGE INDEX FOR FINAL-YEAR ASSESSMENT http://timss.bc.edu/timss1995i/TIMSSPDF/SRAppA.pdf
A further difficulty in defining the desired population for the final-year assessment is that many students drop out before the final year of any track. Thus a TIMSS Coverage Index (TCI) was calculated that quantifies the proportion of the entire school-leaving age cohort that is covered by the TIMSS final-year sample in each country. The TCI was defined as follows:
The numerator in this expression is the total enrollment in the grades tested byTIMSS, estimated from the weighted sample data. This estimate corresponds to the size of the population to which the TIMSS results generalize and makes appropriate provision for student non-response. It does not include students who are no longer attending school or students who were excluded from the sample on grounds of physical or other disability. It also does not include students who were repeating the final grade. Because some students repeat the final year of a track, or take the final year in more than one track at different times, they may be in the final year of a track without completing their secondary education that year. On the one hand, students who are not completing their education still have the potential to gain further knowledge in additional years of schooling, and thus will not have attained their full yield at the time of the TIMSS assessment. On the other hand, and of more serious concern, the presence both of students who are repeating the final track and of those who will repeat that track can contribute a substantial downward bias to the estimated achievement of the population. Repeating students would be represented twice in the population, and are likely to be lower-achieving on average than those who do not repeat. The only practical way for TIMSS to deal with this problem was to exclude students who were repeating the final year. Thus, the population of final-year students is formally defined as those students taking the final year of one track of the secondary system for the first time. The denominator in the expression is an estimate of the school-leaving agecohort size. Since the age at which students in upper-secondary school may leave school varies, TIMSS estimated the size of the school-leaving age cohort by taking the average of the size of the 1995 age cohorts for 15-, 16-, 17-, 18-, and 19-year-olds in each country. (Although the estimate was generally based on the 15-19 age group, there were exceptions; for example, in Germany it was based on the 17-19 age group.) This information was provided by NRCs from official population census figures in their countries. This approach reflects the fact that students in the final year of secondary school are likely to be almost entirely a subset of the population of 15- to 19-year-olds in most countries. Table A.4 presents the computation of the TCI for each country. |
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Modified Wednesday, December 03, 2008 Copyright @ 2007 by Fathers' Manifesto & Christian Party |