STATISTICAL VALIDATION OF AN ENGLISH FOR SPECIFIC PURPOSES ACHIEVEMENT TEST USING CLASSICAL TEST THEORY: A CASE STUDY OF A HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56131/pstp.2026.30.1.436Reikšminiai žodžiai:
Classical Test Theory (CTT), language achievement test, test validation, English for Specific Purposes (ESP), item analysis, facility value, discrimination index, internal reliability, vocational educationSantrauka
Language achievement tests are widely used in higher education to assess student learning outcomes; however, their psychometric quality is rarely examined. This is particularly common in professional technical education, where teachers often design tests independently without conducting statistical validation. This article presents a Classical Test Theory (CTT)-based validation of a Professional English achievement test administered to first-year students in the Technical Maintenance of Automobiles programme at Šiaulių valstybinė kolegija, Lithuania. The study was motivated by a professional development partnership between the institution and Universidad de Jaén, Spain, within the NEOLAiA European Universities Alliance. A multiple-choice pilot test was analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics. The analysis focused on item facility values, distractor functioning, item discrimination, and internal reliability. The results indicated that 80% of items fell within the acceptable facility value range, 45 out of 50 items demonstrated acceptable to excellent discrimination, distractors functioned effectively, and overall internal reliability was satisfactory (Cronbach’s α = .783). The findings confirm that the test demonstrates adequate psychometric quality and highlight the practical value of CTT as an accessible tool for institutional test validation.
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