Measuring Original Thinking in Elementary School: Development and Validation of a Computational Psychometric Approach

被引:12
|
作者
Acar, Selcuk [1 ,4 ]
Dumas, Denis [2 ]
Organisciak, Peter [3 ]
Berthiaume, Kelly [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ North Texas, Dept Educ Psychol, Denton, TX USA
[2] Univ Georgia, Dept Educ Psychol, Athens, GA USA
[3] Univ Denver, Dept Res Methods & Informat Sci, Denver, CO USA
[4] Univ North Texas, Dept Educ Psychol, Matthews Hall,Room 304E,1300 West Highland St, Denton, TX 76203 USA
关键词
creativity; originality; large language modeling; computational psychometrics; elementary school; CREATIVE SELF-EFFICACY; DIVERGENT THINKING; TORRANCE TESTS; ACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENT; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; LATENT-VARIABLES; FIT INDEXES; METAANALYSIS; INTELLIGENCE; PERFORMANCE;
D O I
10.1037/edu0000844
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
Creativity is highly valued in both education and the workforce, but assessing and developing creativity can be difficult without psychometrically robust and affordable tools. The open-ended nature of creativity assessments has made them difficult to score, expensive, often imprecise, and therefore impractical for school- or district-wide use. To address this challenge, we developed and validated the Measure of Original Thinking for Elementary School (MOTES) in five phases, including the development of the item pool and test instructions, expert validation, cognitive pilots, and validation of the automated scoring and latent test structure. MOTES consists of three game-like computerized activities (uses, examples, and sentences subscales), with eight items in each for a total of 24 items. Using large language modeling techniques, MOTES is scored for originality by our open-access artificial intelligence platform with a high level of agreement with independent subjective human ratings across all three subscales at the response level (rs = .79, .91, and .85 for uses, examples, and sentences, respectively). Confirmatory factor analyses showed a good fit with three factors corresponding to each game, subsumed under a higher-order originality factor. Internal consistency reliability was strong for both the subscales (H = 0.82, 0.85, and 0.88 for uses, examples, and sentences, respectively) and the higher-order originality factor (H = 0.89). MOTES scores showed moderate positive correlations with external creative performance indicators as well as academic achievement. The implications of these findings are discussed in relation to the challenges of assessing creativity in schools and research.
引用
收藏
页码:953 / 981
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Development and Validation of Computational Thinking Assessment of Chinese Elementary School Students
    Li, Yan
    Xu, Shan
    Liu, Jia
    JOURNAL OF PACIFIC RIM PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 15
  • [2] Development of Computational Thinking Education System for Elementary School Class
    Minamide, Akiyuki
    Takemata, Kazuya
    Yamada, Hirofumi
    2020 IEEE 20TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES (ICALT 2020), 2020, : 22 - 23
  • [3] Stimulus to computational thinking: a proposal for elementary school
    dos Santos, Elisangela Ribas
    Soares, Graciele
    Dal Bianco, Guilherme
    da Rocha Filho, Joao Bernardes
    Lahm, Regis Alexandre
    REVISTA LATINOAMERICANA DE TECNOLOGIA EDUCATIVA-RELATEC, 2016, 15 (03): : 99 - 112
  • [4] Analysis of algorithmic strategy development in the development of computational thinking of upper elementary school students
    Wang, Xiaowen
    Hu, Pinqi
    Chen, Guang
    31ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTERS IN EDUCATION, ICCE 2023, VOL I, 2023, : 388 - 393
  • [5] The competent Computational Thinking Test: Development and Validation of an Unplugged Computational Thinking Test for Upper Primary School
    El-Hamamsy, Laila
    Zapata-Caceres, Maria
    Barroso, Estefania Martin
    Mondada, Francesco
    Zufferey, Jessica Dehler
    Bruno, Barbara
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL COMPUTING RESEARCH, 2022, 60 (07) : 1818 - 1866
  • [6] Development and validation of a computational thinking test for lower primary school students
    Zhang, Shuhan
    Wong, Gary K. W.
    ETR&D-EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, 2023, 71 (04): : 1595 - 1630
  • [7] Development and validation of a computational thinking test for lower primary school students
    Shuhan Zhang
    Gary K. W. Wong
    Educational technology research and development, 2023, 71 : 1595 - 1630
  • [8] Computational thinking in elementary school teachers: a systematic review
    Collado-Sanchez, Maria
    Pinto-Llorente, Ana M.
    Garcia-Penalvo, Francisco J.
    CAMPUS VIRTUALES, 2023, 12 (02): : 147 - 162
  • [9] Development and Validation of the Computational Thinking Test for Elementary School Students (CTT-ES): Correlate CT Competency With CT Disposition
    Tsai, Meng-Jung
    Chien, Francis Pingfan
    Lee, Silvia Wen-Yu
    Hsu, Chung-Yuan
    Liang, Jyh-Chong
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL COMPUTING RESEARCH, 2022, 60 (05) : 1110 - 1129
  • [10] Computational Thinking: A Tool to Motivate Understanding in Elementary School Teachers
    Saari, Erni Marlina
    Blanchfield, Peter
    Hopkins, Gail
    COMPUTER SUPPORTED EDUCATION, CSEDU 2015, 2016, 583 : 348 - 364