The Impact of Item-Writing Flaws on Difficulty and Discrimination in Item Response Theory
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Mar 13, 2025
Abstract
High-quality test items are essential for educational assessments,
particularly within Item Response Theory (IRT). Traditional validation methods
rely on resource-intensive pilot testing to estimate item difficulty and
discrimination. More recently, Item-Writing Flaw (IWF) rubrics emerged as a
domain-general approach for evaluating test items based on textual features.
However, their relationship to IRT parameters remains underexplored. To address
this gap, we conducted a study involving over 7,000 multiple-choice questions
across various STEM subjects (e.g., math and biology). Using an automated
approach, we annotated each question with a 19-criteria IWF rubric and studied
relationships to data-driven IRT parameters. Our analysis revealed
statistically significant links between the number of IWFs and IRT difficulty
and discrimination parameters, particularly in life and physical science
domains. We further observed how specific IWF criteria can impact item quality
more and less severely (e.g., negative wording vs. implausible distractors).
Overall, while IWFs are useful for predicting IRT parameters--particularly for
screening low-difficulty MCQs--they cannot replace traditional data-driven
validation methods. Our findings highlight the need for further research on
domain-general evaluation rubrics and algorithms that understand
domain-specific content for robust item validation.