Each component in the figure above represents a claim. At the highest level, the test developer may claim that the consequences that are an outcome of the decisions made based on the test are beneficial for all stakeholder groups (e.g., decision errors have been minimized). This presumes a claim regarding the decisions that follow from score interpretations — specifically, that decisions are equitable and sensitive to the values of relevant institutions (educational, societal, organizational, legal). In order to justify interpretations about test-taker abilities based on scores, the test developer makes claims about the meaningfulness, impartiality, generalizability, relevance and sufficiency of interpretations. Finally, all of these claims rest upon the foundational claim that scores based on test-taker performances are consistent across test forms, administrations and raters. Thus, each claim in an AUA consists of:
- an outcome of test use (e.g., the decisions that follow from interpretations about test-taker abilities)
- qualities of that outcome (e.g., decisions are values-sensitive and equitable)
Both decision makers and test developers share responsibility for justifying assessment use. Test developers are expected to provide evidence to support the claim that test scores are consistent, and that scores may be used to make interpretations about test-taker abilities. Decision makers need to demonstrate that decisions are values-sensitive and equitable, and that consequences of decisions are beneficial. Unfortunately, decision makers may lack the expertise needed to provide adequate backing for these claims (e.g., documentation from standard setting, estimates of decision errors). Consequently, an AUA may be enhanced through collaboration between decision makers and test developers. At the very least, feedback from decision makers should be sought by test developers in order to determine whether claims about the decisions and consequences based on test use may be justified.