AUTHOR=Terao Takahiro TITLE=Difficulty of Summarization Items for Japanese Learners: Effects of Passages, Distractors, and Response Formats JOURNAL=Frontiers in Education VOLUME=5 YEAR=2020 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/education/articles/10.3389/feduc.2020.00009 DOI=10.3389/feduc.2020.00009 ISSN=2504-284X ABSTRACT=

This study aims to examine factors affecting the difficulty of summarization items for Japanese learners. In the process of item development, creating a connection between cognitive features related to target construct and the difficulty of test items is necessary to define the abilities to be measured. Previous studies have mainly focused on local reading comprehension, while this study addressed summarization skills at the paragraph level. The study originally developed items for an experiment that elicited three macrorules of the paragraph and text: deletion, generalization, and integration. This study evaluated the influence of passages, distractor characteristics central to summarization processes, and response formats on item difficulty, using item difficulty modeling. When editing distractors, characteristics of L2 learners' summarization were carefully reviewed and reflected. The participants included 150 freshmen from Japan, who were asked to answer experimental summarization items. The results of the linear logistic test model (LLTM) indicated that the main source of difficulty in summarization items was distractor characteristics. In particular, summaries with unnecessary information or lacking necessary information increased the level of difficulty. In addition, summaries with detailed information, such as episodes and examples, and with a viewpoint different from the author's, also increased difficulty. The effect of passage differences was found to be minimal. A difference in response formats moderately affected item difficulty, and the extended-matching format was slightly more difficult than the conventional multiple-choice format. This study suggested that test developers and item writers should pay attention to distractor development, to limit students' errors when measuring summarization skills of L2 learners.