2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.ipm.2009.08.006
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Aspects of ‘relevance’ in the alignment of curriculum with educational standards

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
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“…Decisions to keep digital information appeared to be driven by a teacher's context, including student grade level, curriculum, and existing materials for a topic. The different aspects of teachers' contexts drove the relevance assessments, as has been found in previous studies (Lawley, 2011;Reitsma, Marshall, Dalton, & Cyr, 2008;Reitsma, Marshall, & Zarske, 2010), and resulted in the decision whether to print, download, or bookmark the information.…”
Section: Keeping Informationmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Decisions to keep digital information appeared to be driven by a teacher's context, including student grade level, curriculum, and existing materials for a topic. The different aspects of teachers' contexts drove the relevance assessments, as has been found in previous studies (Lawley, 2011;Reitsma, Marshall, Dalton, & Cyr, 2008;Reitsma, Marshall, & Zarske, 2010), and resulted in the decision whether to print, download, or bookmark the information.…”
Section: Keeping Informationmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Reitsma et al. () make an attempt at unfolding the alignment concept itself. Following the multidimensional notion of “relevance” advocated by Saracevic (, , ) and Schamber, Eisenberg, and Nilan (), they model alignment as a composite of different aspects or attributes of a resource.…”
Section: Background: Standard Alignment As Information Retrievalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although many search, retrieval, and matching tasks can be approached with fully automated computational mechanisms such as Support Vector Machines (SVM) when these mechanisms are trained with collections of correct, i.e., “vetted” matches, many important tasks are not well suited to such treatment. The poor interrater reliability in educational standards alignment mentioned above (Devaul et al., ; Reitsma et al., ; Reitsma & Diekema, ), for instance, implies that it is difficult to establish such training sets. Hence, we believe that the multifaceted character of the “alignment” concept calls for a dynamic, multidimensional, and transitive retrieval mechanism in which users take part by interactively adding information in real time, thereby steering and affecting how different alignment aspects are accounted for in the relevance computations.…”
Section: Background: Standard Alignment As Information Retrievalmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Inter-rater reliability problems are common in K-12 standards alignment exercises, as previously observed by, for instance, Devaul et al 8 , Reitsma et al 9 , and Reitsma and Diekema 6 .…”
Section: Ngss Alignment Projectmentioning
confidence: 68%