June 1, 2001

Using Technology to Assess Students’ Web Expertise

Authors:
Davina C. D. Klein, Louise Yarnall, and Christina Glaubke
This study investigated the use of an online authentic assessment tool to evaluate students’ fluency with the World Wide Web (WWW). Participants included 120 middle and high school students with a strong technology background and a familiarity with navigating the World Wide Web. Using our online Web Expertise Assessment and accompanying WWW background questionnaire, students were able to demonstrate their WWW knowledge and expertise. We then identified important individual measures and coded these reliably. Results from principal components factor analysis suggested four broad indicators of Web expertise: navigational strategies, prior Web knowledge, searching expertise, and finding ability. In general, these composite indicators make sense theoretically, and our results support the construct validity of each. The indicators appear to be reliable with alphas ranging from .88 to .71. Further, these measures match our theoretical conceptions grounded in the literature. We conclude our paper with a discussion of implications for future research in assessing and supporting students’ Web learning.
Klein, D. C. D., Yarnall, L., & Glaubke, C. (2001). Using technology to assess students’ web expertise (CSE Report 544). Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles, National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST).
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