98-002429
Clasina Vanthul vs.
Department Of Environmental Protection
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Monday, November 16, 1998.
Recommended Order on Monday, November 16, 1998.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8CLASINA VANTHUL, )
11)
12Petitioner, )
14)
15vs. ) Case No. 98-2429
20)
21DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL )
25PROTECTION, )
27)
28Respondent. )
30_________________________________)
31RECOMMENDED ORDER
33Upon due notice, this cause came on for formal hearing on
44September 11, 1998, in Tallahassee, Florida, before Ella Jane P.
54Davis, a duly assigned Administrative Law Judge of the Division
64of Administrative Hearings.
67APPEARANCES
68For Petitioner: Gerrit Vanthul, as Qualified Representative
755 279 Southeast 39th Street
80Trenton, Florida 32693
83For Respondent: Cynthia Christen, Esquire
88Department of Environmental Protection
923900 Commonwealth Boulevard
95Mail Station 35
98Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
101STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES
105(1) Is Petitioner entitled to credit for her answers to any
116of the questions she specifically challenged or for the four
126questions deleted by the Department of Environmental Protection
134(Department) on the February 1998 Class "B" Domestic Wastewater
143Operator Certification examination (wastewater examination)?
148(2) Was the Department's administration or grading of
156Petitioner's examination arbitrary, capricious or otherwise
162unfair so as to entitle Petitioner to either additional points
172for a passing grade or an opportunity to retake the examination
183without cost?
185PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
187By letter of April 6, 1998, the Department notified
196Petitioner that she had failed the February 1998 wastewater
205examination. Petitioner timely requested an administrative
211hearing by a letter dated May 5, 1998. The Department referred
222the matter to the Division of Administrative Hearings on or about
233June 6, 1998. At the time of its referral, the Department had
245already received another letter from Petitioner dated May 26,
2541998. The second letter alleged additional disputed issues of
263material fact. The Department never forwarded the May 26, 1998,
273letter to the Division.
277On June 30, 1998, an Order of Prehearing Instructions and
287Notice of Hearing for September 11, 1998, was mailed to both
298parties.
299At the commencement of the disputed fact hearing, the
308Department stipulated that Petitioner's second letter could be
316treated as an amended petition and that the Department had
326adequate notice of the additional disputed issues of material
335fact included in Petitioner's second letter. Accordingly, the
343case went forward on the merits of all issues raised.
353After appropriate examination on the record, and without
361objection by the Department, Gerrit Vanthul, Petitioner's
368husband, was accepted as Petitioner's Qualified Representative
375for purposes of this proceeding.
380Respondent Department had timely complied with the Order of
389Prehearing Instructions. Petitioner had not complied with the
397Order of Prehearing Instructions. Nonetheless, Petitioner was
404permitted to present documentary evidence and her sole witness.
413Petitioner presented the oral testimony of Gerrit Vanthul
421and had eight exhibits admitted in evidence. Part of
430Petitioner's Exhibit 1 was not admitted, and Petitioner's Exhibit
4399 was not admitted. Petitioner did not testify on her own
450behalf.
451Respondent Department presented the oral testimony of Greg
459Dawkins, Mary Smith, Mary Patt Peterson, Gary Peterson, Ph.D.,
468and William Allman. Greg Dawkins was accepted as an expert in
479emergency response and community right-to-know. Dr. Gary
486Peterson was accepted as an expert in examination development and
496psychometrics. William Allman was accepted as an expert in the
506operation of wastewater treatment plant operations. Respondent
513had nine exhibits admitted in evidence.
519A transcript was filed in due course, and all timely filed
530proposed recommended orders have been considered in the
538preparation of this recommended order.
543FINDINGS OF FACT
5461. Petitioner took the Class "B" wastewater operator
554certification examination given in February 1998 by the
562Department of Environmental Protection.
5662. Pilot questions are questions submitted by licensees and
575educators which do not yet have a "performance record" of testing
586validity. Petitioner alleged that pilot questions were used on
595her examination contrary to rules of the Department. Petitioner
604submitted no competent evidence to establish this allegation and
613it was credibly refuted. There are no pilot questions in the
624bank of potential questions from which the examination was
633composed.
6343. Petitioner conjectured that questions on her "B" level
643examination may have been drawn from a bank of questions for a
655higher level ("A") certification examination. In fact, the
665examination questions for the "B" level examination were selected
674from a bank of questions developed by the Department of Business
685and Professional Regulation. The Department of Business and
693Professional Regulation was the agency that had jurisdiction over
702the operator certification program before the Department of
710Environmental Protection assumed responsibility therefor. The
716selection of the examination questions was accomplished by
724selecting the percentage of questions from a range in a subject
735area already predetermined by rule and a computer program
744inserting the number of questions to fill that percentage. There
754is no way the computer program can select questions from another
765level of examination, for instance "A" level or "C" level.
7754. Prior to the examination, candidates for examination
783were advised they would have four hours to complete the
793examination. Examinees for the February 1998 examination in fact
802were provided four full hours after all preliminary matters and
812reading of instructions were completed.
8175. Prior to the examination, the Department provided
825candidates for examination with a list of subject areas that it
836intended to place on the examination, so that candidates could
846effectively prepare. All subject areas, except one, were in fact
856covered on the February 1998 examination. In some instances, a
866single question/answer satisfied two or more subject areas
874because of content equally applicable to each subject area. In
884other instances, the same subject area was covered by several
894questions/answers. Only one subject area that was listed in the
904pre-examination information did not appear on the February 1998
913examination. That subject area was "energy." The reason that
922the subject area of "energy" was not included on the February
9331998 examination was that there were no energy questions in the
944bank of questions which the Department of Environmental
952Protection had inherited from the Department of Business and
961Professional Regulation.
9636. The sole result of the absence of any energy question on
975the examination is that Petitioner and all other examinees in her
986group did not receive as thorough an examination in a single
997subject matter area as the licensure board had aspirationally
1006intended. However, all examinees were equally treated.
10137. Originally, there were 87 questions on the February 1998
1023examination. After the examination was administered and a
1031special analysis report on the grades was produced, the
1040Department's examination review committee met with the
1047examination consultants. The committee recommended to the
1054Department, and the Department accepted the recommendation, that
1062four questions should be deleted because they were misleading or
1072for some other reason failed to adequately and reliably measure
1082the examinees' ability to practice at a Class "B" license level.
1093Removal of the four questions only lowered the mean score by one
1105point, thereby creating a slightly easier examination while
1113simultaneously slightly increasing its reliability.
11188. Examinees were instructed to select the best multiple
1127choice answer for each question. Each of the questions was
1137equally weighted.
11399. The Department interpreted Rule 61E12-41.005(5), Florida
1146Administrative Code , as requiring that examinees achieve at least
1155a 65% rounded score on the examination in order to pass the
1167examination.
116810. In order to determine an examinee's success on the
1178examination, the Department multiplied the initial 87 questions
1186by 65% (.65) and so determined that an examinee would need at
1198least 54 correct questions/answers to earn a passing grade. In
1208determining a candidate's grade on an operator licensure
1216examination, the Department determines the number of correct
1224answers needed to reach the minimum rounded score of 65%. A
1235special analysis report also indicates how many correct answers
1244equal each percentage grade. If this number is not a whole
1255number, the Department uses the rounding method to reach a whole
1266number, based on 0.5 percentage.
127111. By the foregoing grading interpretation, before
1278deletion of the four questions, Petitioner's rounded score was
128760%, with 52 correct answers. Petitioner's grade improved with
1296the deletion of the four questions, because she had incorrectly
1306answered each of the four questions which were later deleted.
1316After the four questions were deleted, the same grading system
1326resulted in a rounded score of 63% with 52 correct answers.
133712. By letter dated April 6, 1998, the Department notified
1347Petitioner that she had failed the examination because she did
1357not get a rounded 65% score based on 52 correct answers.
136813. After receiving the letter, Petitioner requested a
1376review of the examination. Petitioner was allowed to review the
1386questions and answers she had missed. Petitioner was also
1395allowed to write comments on the question sheets which she
1405reviewed.
140614. Petitioner's comments were submitted to the examination
1414review committee of the Department for the committee's review.
1423Upon review of Petitioner's comments and the examination, the
1432committee determined that the questions and required answers were
1441accurate and fair. It recommended no change to Petitioner's
1450score. Petitioner was notified that no change would be made to
1461her score.
146315. Petitioner then timely requested an administrative
1470hearing. Although Petitioner's two letters/petitions (see
1476Preliminary Statement supra .) initially raised issues concerning
1484a number of examination questions, Petitioner only presented
1492evidence concerning the contents of question 78 at formal
1501hearing.
150216. Question 78 tested examinees' knowledge of appropriate
1510emergency response activity and notification concerning the
1517release of chlorine gas.
152117. Petitioner asserted that question 78 was vague,
1529ambiguous, and misleading because it did not specifically state
1538that a "reportable quantity" was to be considered in choosing the
1549best answer from among multiple choice options of reporting a
1559chlorine spill to one entity, two entities, three entities or no
1570entities. For this reason, Petitioner alleged that her answer
1579could have been an answer which was equally correct ("multi-
1590keyed") with the answer selected as correct by the Department.
160118. Mr. Dawkins, who was accepted as an expert in emergency
1612response and community right-to-know, testified that the question
1620was not misleading. Mr. Dawkins is not associated with the
1630Respondent Department, any of its committees, or the examination
1639preparation process. He oversees actual reportage of dangerous
1647chemical spills for the Department of Community Affairs.
1655Although Mr. Dawkins indicated that he, personally, would not
1664have written question 78 quite the way it was posed on the
1676examination, he still felt that since it addressed reporting
1685requirements, examinees should have assumed that a reportable
1693quantity was involved and answered accordingly.
169919. All three of Respondent's experts testified that the
1708answer chosen as correct by the Department was the most accurate
1719of the multiple choice answers provided on the examination and
1729that the subject matter and correct answer should have been
1739understood by a qualified operator of a wastewater treatment
1748plant at the "B" licensure level.
175420. The Department has under contract an expert in
1763examination and psychometrics. The Evaluation Services
1769Instructional Support Center Learning Systems Institute of
1776Florida State University provides to the Department as part of
1786the examination grading, a special analysis report for each
1795examination. This report contains statistics about the scores,
1803difficulty of each question, and how the spread of answers by the
1815examinees compared to the four quadrants of grade results.
182421. The February 1998 examination was an extremely
1832difficult examination, as evidenced by the fact that more
1841examinees failed than passed. However, it was demonstrated that
185077% of examinees who took the examination got question 78
1860correct. Question 78 also discriminated between high and low
1869scoring examinees.
187122. The item analysis performed before the other four
1880questions were deleted did not show that question 78 was
1890misleading in any way, but did show that each of the four
1902questions deleted were misleading or otherwise flawed.
190923. One of the proctors for the February 1998 examination
1919personally observed that at the time the examination ended, only
1929two examinees remained in the examination room and that neither
1939of these examinees was Petitioner. It can be inferred therefrom
1949that Petitioner had finished the examination, had time to spare,
1959and had left the room.
196424. Finally, the inclusion of examination questions which
1972were later deleted is not a concern as to the time allotted.
1984This type of examination is a "power exam" and speed is not a
1997factor.
1998CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
200125. The Division of Administrative Hearin gs has
2009jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this cause,
2019pursuant to Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes.
202526. The burden of proof and duty to go forward is upon the
2038Petitioner in this cause. Petitioner must show by a
2047preponderance of the evidence that the examination was faulty,
2056arbitrarily or capriciously worded or graded, or that Petitioner
2065was arbitrarily or capriciously denied credit through a grading
2074process devoid of logic or reason. Harac v. Department of
2084Professional Regulation , 484 So. 2d 1333, 1338 (Fla. 3rd DCA
20941986); State ex rel Glaser v. J.M. Pepper , 155 So. 2d 383 (Fla.
21071st DCA 1963).
211027. For the regulation of operators, the Department of
2119Environmental Protection is entitled to use rules developed by
2128the Department of Business and Professional Regulation until the
2137Department of Environmental Protection promulgates its own rules,
2145as set forth in Section 17 of Chapter 97-236, Laws of Florida .
215828. Rule 61-11.010(1)(b), Florida Administrative Code ,
2164provides as follows:
2167(1) Pursuant to Section 455.217, Florida
2173Statutes, grading of all examinations shall
2179be processed only as follows:
2184* * *
2187(b) Departmentally developed objective,
2191multiple choice examination shall be graded
2197by the Department or its designee. After an
2205examination has been administered the Board
2211shall reject any questions that do not
2218reliably measure the general areas of
2224competency specified in the rules of the
2231Board. The Department shall review the item
2238analysis and any statistically questionable
2243items after the examination has been
2249administered. Based upon this review, the
2255Department shall adjust the scoring key by
2262totally disregarding the questionable items
2267for grading purposes or by multi-keying,
2273giving credit for more than one correct
2280answer per question. All questions which do
2287not adequately and reliably measure the
2293applicant's ability to practice the
2298profession shall be rejected. The Department
2304shall calculate each candidate's grade
2309utilizing the scoring key or adjusted scoring
2316key, if applicable, and shall provide each
2323candidate a grade report.
232729. Therefore, Petitioner had no right to have the four
2337deleted questions scored as part of her examination.
234530. Petitioner failed to establish that she suffered any
2354disadvantage as a result of having too little time to complete
2365the examination. Her theory that she would have achieved more
2375correct answers and thus a higher percentage score if she had
2386spent less time or no time on the four questions which were
2398ultimately deleted and more time on the remaining 83 questions
2408which ultimately were counted, is purely speculative and is
2417belied entirely by the fact that she left the examination room
2428before the entire time allotted for taking the examination had
2438elapsed.
243931. Petitioner's theory that she would have done better on
2449other subject matter areas of the examination if she had not
2460spent time studying the subject matter of "energy" which was not
2471included in the examination also is pure speculation. Her
2480assertion that she was somehow prejudiced by not being examined
2490at all in the subject area of energy also is purely speculative
2502and does not indicate any arbitrary, capricious, or prejudicial
2511treatment by the Department under the facts of this case.
252132. Petitioner's theory with regard to the correct answer
2530on question 78 was not proven, and clear, competent, and
2540substantial evidence was presented by Respondent to demonstrate
2548that question 78 was not a pilot question or a "trick" question,
2560or otherwise arbitrary or capricious. Moreover, clear and
2568convincing evidence (not just preponderant evidence) was produced
2576by the Department to show that Petitioner did not select the best
2588multiple choice answer for question 78. Question 78 was
2597incorrectly answered by Petitioner. Petitioner's answer to
2604question 78 was not "multi-keyed" because to do so would have
2615given her credit for a wrong answer The people of Florida would
2627be best protected by licensing at the Class "B" level only
2638persons with the required skills, education, training, and
2646experience necessary to be able to correctly answer question 78.
265633. Petitioner's proposed calculation of her score as set
2665out in various ways in the testimony of Mr. Vanthul, several
2676exhibits, and Petitioner's proposed recommended order, is not in
2685accord with the clear requirements of Rule 61E12-41.005(5),
2693Florida Administrative Code.
269634. The Department's methodology of scoring as set forth in
2706the Findings of Fact, supra , also does not follow the precise
2717language of the rule. The Department applied the percentage
2726backwards to determine the number of correct questions/answers
2734each examinee would need to equal 65%, instead of dividing the
2745number of possible correct answers into each respective
2753examinee's number of actual correct answers so as to determine
2763each examinee's exact correct percentage score and then rounding.
2772However, this makes no difference because the Department got the
2782correct percentages.
278435. Even when the clear language of the rule is literally
2795applied, Petitioner has failed to make a minimum passing score of
280665%.
280736. Rule 61E12-41.005(5) reads:
2811Examination answer sheets shall be
2816electronically scored. The minimum passing
2821score on the examination is 65%. In rounding
2829percentages, any percentage which is 0.5 or
2836above shall be rounded up to the next higher
2845whole number. Percentages less than 0.5
2851shall be rounded to the next lower whole
2859number.
286037. If the clear language of the rule is literally applied,
2871the following calculations are made: Originally, there were 87
2880equally-weighted questions on the examination, and Petitioner got
288852 correct answers. 52 correct answers out of 87 possible
2898correct answers constitutes an exact percentage score of 59.77%.
2907Using the "rounding" rule as written, this would have rendered
2917Petitioner's score as 60%. Petitioner had incorrectly answered
2925the four deleted questions, so their removal from consideration
2934gave her 52 correct answers out of 83 possible correct questions.
294552 out of 83 constitutes an exact percentage score of 62.65%,
2956which rendered Petitioner's score, according to a literal
2964application of the "rounding" rule, as 63%, or two percent short
2975of a minimum passing rounded score of 65% on the examination.
298638. The examination was not faulty. All candidates' grades
2995were calculated in the same manner. No one was given credit for
3007any of the four deleted questions. Neither the wording nor the
3018grading of those questions were arbitrary or capricious. The
3027Department's refusal to credit Petitioner for correct answers on
3036the four deleted questions or for the one specifically challenged
3046question 78 was not devoid of logic or reason.
3055RECOMMENDATION
3056Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law,
3066it is
3068RECOMMENDED that the Department of Environmental Protection
3075enter a Final Order denying the Petitioner's challenge to the
3085February 1998 Class "B" wastewater operator certification
3092examination and assigning her a final percentage grade of 63%
3102thereon.
3103DONE AND ENTERED this 16th day of November, 1998, in
3113Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
3117_____________________ ______________
3119ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
3123Administrative Law Judge
3126Division of Administrative Hearings
3130The DeSoto Building
31331230 Apalachee Parkway
3136Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
3139(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
3143Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
3147Filed with the Clerk of the
3153Division of Administrative Hearings
3157this 16th day of November, 1998.
3163COPIES FURNISHED:
3165Gerrit Vanthul, Qualified Representative
31695279 Southeast 39th Street
3173Trenton, Florida 32693
3176Cynthia Christen, Esquire
3179Department of Environmental
3182Protection
31832600 Blairstone Road
3186Mail Station 35
3189Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
3192Kathy Carter, Agency Clerk
3196Department of Environmental
3199Protection
32003900 Commonwealth Boulevard
3203Mail Station 35
3206Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
3209F. Perry Odom, General Counsel
3214Department of Environmental
3217Protection
32183900 Commonwealth Boulevard
3221Mail Station 35
3224Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
3227NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
3233All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within 15
3244days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to
3255this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that will
3266issue the final order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- Date: 12/28/1998
- Proceedings: Final Order filed.
- Date: 10/15/1998
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Proposed Recommended Order filed.
- Date: 10/15/1998
- Proceedings: Cover Letter to C. Christen & CC: C. Vanthul from Judge Davis (& Enclosed PRO filed. at DOAH on 10/14/98) sent out.
- Date: 10/14/1998
- Proceedings: (Petitioner) Post Hearing Order Conclusions of Law and Proposed Recommendations filed.
- Date: 10/06/1998
- Proceedings: Post-Hearing Order sent out.
- Date: 10/05/1998
- Proceedings: Notice of Filing; Volumes 1-2 of 2) DOAH Court Reporter Final Hearing Transcript filed.
- Date: 09/11/1998
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- Date: 08/18/1998
- Proceedings: (Respondent) Unilateral Prehearing Stipulation filed.
- Date: 06/30/1998
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for 9/11/98; 9:30am; Tallahassee)
- Date: 06/30/1998
- Proceedings: Order of Prehearing Instructions sent out.
- Date: 06/18/1998
- Proceedings: (Respondent) Notice and Certificate of Service of Interrogatories filed.
- Date: 06/15/1998
- Proceedings: Joint Response to Initial Order filed.
- Date: 06/02/1998
- Proceedings: Initial Order issued.
- Date: 05/28/1998
- Proceedings: Request For Administrative Hearing, Letter Form; Agency Action Letter (exhibits); Request for Assignment of Administrative Law Judge and Notice of Preservation of Record filed.