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The Effect of Different Incentive Approaches on Student Compliance and Performance When Using a Standardized Test

Kathleen A. Krentler and Patricia N. Dintrone
San Diego State University

Interest in assessment seems to have sparked a proliferation of learning outcomes assessment tools however the task of tool administration has remained largely a solitary one. How best to accomplish assessment administration in a way that garners active participation, if not enthusiasm, from students?

Three incentive systems, all of which involved “extra credit” were tested for their effect on student compliance with and performance on a standardized test designed to assess mastery of essential business principles that was administered in a capstone course. The three different approaches were:

  1. Same number of extra credit points awarded for participation (completion of test) to all students regardless of individual performance.
  2. A larger number of extra credit points awarded to students who performed in the top 10% of the class on the test; a smaller number of extra credit points awarded to students in the middle 80% of class performance; an even smaller number of extra credit points awarded to students who took the test but performed in the bottom 10% and to students who chose not to take the test.
  3. A specified number of extra credit points to students who took the test and achieved a specified (70%) level of performance.

Approach #2 produced a slightly lower participation level (89.3%) than the other two approaches (92.7% and 94.1% respectively) but the difference was not statistically significant. This is particularly interesting when it is noted that students under this approach received some extra credit points even if they chose not to take the exam. Moreover, participation levels with all three approaches were high. It appears that offering any type of incentive system does produce relatively high levels of compliance. Since there was no control group used however (a section where no incentive was offered), this result should be viewed with caution. An alternative explanation is that a request from a faculty member to take the test, even when it is not part of the evaluative components for a course, is likely to be responded to favorably. The fact that Approach #2 produced an 89.3% participation level even though students could earn extra credit points without even taking the exam seems to support this alternative explanation.

Approach #3 produced a significantly higher level of performance (53.4%) amongst the test takers than either of the other approaches (50.5% and 50.8% respectively). This seems to suggest that students are motivated to exert performance effort under this approach. Approach #2, the competitive incentive system, however, also provided additional incentive for higher performance and yet did not yield a statistically significant higher level of performance than Approach #1 which provided no performance incentive. It may be that student’s perceptions of the likelihood of scoring in the top ten percent of the class (required for the larger amount of extra credit under Approach #2) suggested that it was “not worth the effort.”

A copy of the complete study summarized here can be obtained by e-mailing: Kathleen.Krentler@sdsu.edu.