Measurement of Reliability on Volleyball Serve Assessment
throu
g
h Cohen's Ca
pp
a Coefficient Anal
y
sis
Fauzi
1
1
Faculty of Sport Science, Universitas Negeri Yogyakarta, Jl Kolombo No 1, Yogyakarta , Indonesia
Keywords: Measurement, Reliability, Serve, Analysis
Abstract: Research objective is to find out the reliability of volleyball serve instrument, including 1)
opening or introductory, 2) warming up, 3) preparation move, 4) main move, 5) final move, and
6) closing. The subjects of research consisted of two parties, namely 1) 72 male athletes aged
between 16-20 years old who were members of the Pengda PBVSI (Regional Volleyball
Association) in Yogyakarta Special Region club or association, and 2) raters, i.e. six volleyball
coaches. The subjects was taken by random sampling, using following criteria, namely 1) athletes
who have trained for more than three years, 2) athletes who have participated in competitions,
and 3) clubs that developed continuous training, while for the reviewers / trainers, they should be
coaches who actively train in volleyball clubs in Yogyakarta Special Region. Instrument
reliability was measured Cohen's Cappa analysis that allowed six (6) raters / assessors when the
subjects played pre-game. The research results showed 1) the opening or delivery instrument is
0.85; 2) warming up instrument 0.85; 3) preparation move instrument 0.83; 4) main move
instrument 0.87; 5) final move instrument 0.84; and 6) closing instrument 0.84.
1 INTRODUCTION
Volleyball is a team game that requires athletes to
master playing skills. The process of volleyball
training in clubs teaches technique skills for
volleyball athletes and teaches how to apply them in
competitive situations. The volleyball training
process is focused on the athlete in developing
technical skills to play volleyball, namely the skill in
playing the ball.
An instrument can fulfil the requirements as
good measuring tool if it can describe the true state
of the object to be measured and can provide data
that are related correctly and precisely. Good
instrument is said to be good if it can meet the
requirements of validity, reliability, objectivity and
practice.
2 MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION
This research tried to measure the reliability of
volleyball serve instrument items through
observation by raters / assessors on male volleyball
athletes aged 16-20 years who were members of
PBVSI Pengda (Regional Volleyball Association
Administrator) clubs or associations in Yogyakarta
Special Region. The method of observation was
done, so that the measured ability really expressed
the real ability displayed when players play
volleyball.
To determine the performance of volleyball
athlete, assessment is needed. So far, there are many
volleyball assessments in the form of sport skill
tests. Sport skill tests have weaknesses including
only one or two techniques in one skill test and
require various facilities (infrastructure, high walls).
Therefore, it is important and necessary to conduct
research on assessment of the performance of
volleyball skills that meet the reliability criteria of
the instrument. Assessment of performance can be
done in two ways; 1) process performance and 2)
product performance. Assessment of the
performance of volleyball skills in the process
performance by which athletes train volleyball
techniques covering all aspects of the technique with
simulations or demonstrations as shown when
playing or competing.
Based on the description above, it is necessary to
develop the assessment of the performance of the
process (before competing or pre-game). With the
Fauzi, .
Measurement of Reliability on Volleyball Serve Assessment through Cohen’s Cappa Coefficient Analysis.
DOI: 10.5220/0009796505470553
In Proceedings of the 3rd Yogyakarta International Seminar on Health, Physical Education, and Sport Science in conjunction with the 2nd Conference on Interdisciplinary Approach in Sports
(YISHPESS and CoIS 2019), pages 547-553
ISBN: 978-989-758-457-2
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
547
assessment of the performance of the process, it will
be easier for the trainer to see the progress of the
athletes to achieve optimal volleyball skills. The
assessment that was developed in this research was
the assessment of volleyball skills on the
performance of the process (before playing or pre-
game) of volleyball serve technique.
2.1 Assessment of Training- Coaching
Volleyball
Development and implementation of training
program performed by coaches influences the
assessment applied to athletes at club. Anderson
(2003: xi) states that assessment is the process of
gathering information to make decisions. Lund &
Linn (1990: 5) claim that assessment is a systematic
process in collecting, analysing, and interpreting
information that includes work performance,
knowledge, attitudes, skills, work tasks that they
know and can do their jobs.
Assessment includes all the methods used to
collect data about individuals (Mardapi, 2012: 12).
The assessment focuses on the individual, so the
decision is also on the individual. Huba & Freed
(2000: 8) define assessment as a process of
gathering and testing information to improve the
clarity of understanding of what has been learned by
learners or students from their experiences.
Anderson (2003: 15) explains assessment is an
action that is very closely related to decision
making. The more the number of incidents of
decision making from the assessment of training, the
more serious the consequences and implications in
the long term.
The training- coaching volleyball in clubs has
various objectives, including move techniques,
strategy, tactics, cooperation, and fairness skills.
Other supporting factors are used as illustration by
the coach to assess athletes, while training- coaching
also emphasize on aspects of knowledge and
behaviour. The results of training- coaching are
certain competencies or abilities both cognitive,
affective, and psychomotor that are achieved or
mastered by athletes after following the training-
coaching process.
A coach has assessed the training- coaching
results involving measurements using measuring
instruments such as athlete's move observation and
the existing volleyball test (sports skill test) that has
been adopted. The assessment is carried out by the
coach by using the volleyball skill instrument on the
sports skill test without realizing there was a
weakness, namely the existence of culture bias. The
weakness of culture bias is that for tests that are
adaptive in nature, there are several norms that are
not necessarily suitable to be applied or used in other
cultures. The use of athlete's move observations was
not accompanied by the preparation of norms as a
reference for the success of athletes in the process of
practicing.
The assessment process involves gathering
evidence about the achievement of training results of
athletes which in the implementation involves a
measurement process. Measurement is the
determination of numbers in a systematic way to
state the individual's condition or object (Mardapi,
2012: 5). Systematic way means that measurement
activities are carried out through certain procedures
or certain rules, so that the results of measuring the
state of the same object, even though different places
and times will give the same measurement results.
Some of the main principles that must be
considered by coaches in assessment process for
athletes, according to Popham (1995: 16) are
validity, reliability and absence-of-bias. According
to Nitko and Brookhart (2007: 38), validity is the
accuracy of the interpretation and usefulness of the
results of the assessment. Therefore to validate the
interpretation and usefulness of the assessment, it
must combine evidence from other sources which
indicate that the interpretation and usefulness of the
assessment results are appropriate. Validity is a
result of judgment made after considering various
evidences from various relevant sources.
Reliability is coefficient that shows the level of
consistency of the results of the test (Mardapi, 2012:
51). Consistent measurement results are using the
same measuring instrument for different people or at
different times but the same conditions. The degree
of reliability of the assessment results determines the
level of confidence of the results achieved. The
reliability of an assessment result does not guarantee
the validity of the assessment results. It is just that
reliability increases trust in determining decisions
related to assessment results.
Thus, it can be concluded that the training-
coaching assessment is all the methods used by
coach to collect data on the results of training
athletes through systematic measurement.
2.2 Psychomotor Assessment
Assessment of psychomotor aspect or skill is the
success of playing the ball with various volleyball
techniques. Reid (2010: 1) states that in order to
determine the development and improvement of
athletes and motivate them, the coach must use the
opportunity to measure the success of the exercise
by making an assessment at the end of the year.
Assessment of volleyball skills basically rests on the
activities of athletes with many using performance
assessments. With the performance assessment it is
YISHPESS and CoIS 2019 - The 3rd Yogyakarta International Seminar on Health, Physical Education, and Sport Science (YISHPESS
2019) in conjunction with The 2nd Conference on Interdisciplinary Approach in Sports (CoIS 2019)
548
expected that athletes can demonstrate activities in
the form of volleyball techniques. According to
Stiggins (1997: 34), performance assessments call
upon the examinee to demonstrate specific skills and
competencies, that is, to apply skills and knowledge
they have mastered.
Performance assessment of volleyball skills is
basically a process of gathering evidence of
achievement that relies on the performance of
athletes. That is, the performance assessment in its
implementation involves athletes in an activity that
demands to demonstrate its capabilities in the form
of processes and products. This assessment is
expected that athletes can demonstrate that they can
do certain tasks, such as doing volleyball playing
techniques. In performance assessment the important
thing is how the coach observes and scores the
athletes' performance abilities. Therefore, coaches as
raters must pay attention to the validity and
reliability factors of the measuring instrument so that
the expected results of the assessment are not
subjective. In addition, in carrying out the
assessment of volleyball skills the trainer needs
assessment guidelines that aim to facilitate the
assessor or rater in assessing so as to minimize
measurement errors.
2.3 Performance Assessment
Performance assessment or often referred to as
authentic assessment (authentic assessment)
(Metzler, 2005: 180). Authentic assessment in other
books (except Wiggins) is equated with the name of
alternative assessment (performance assessment) or
performance assessment (Herman & Winters, 1992:
146). According to Zainul (2005: 3), performance
Assessment is a variety of tasks and situations where
test participants are asked to demonstrate
understanding and application of in-depth
knowledge, as well as skills in various contexts. This
means that performance assessment or performance
assessment is an assessment that asks test takers or
athletes to perform performance or demonstrate their
knowledge in various contexts according to the
desired criteria.
Morrow (2005: 131) states that assessment is a
real life setting, one that is less contrived and
artificial than traditional forms of testing. This
means that an assessment takes the form of a task
designed in accordance with real life. According to
Mueller (2006), authentic assessment is a form of
assessment in which students are asked to present
assignments in real situations by demonstrating the
application of essential skills and knowledge (direct
assessment).
Based on the description above, it can be
concluded that performance assessment is an
assessment that asks test takers to perform
performance or demonstrate their knowledge and
skills into various contexts according to the desired
criteria.
Performance assessment is characterized as
assessment that emphasizes the form of assignments
so that the results of the work are in the form of
athletes' work called products, and printing rubrics
or guidelines developed and designed according to
the content of the task and used to assess athletes'
products. There are two important components in
performance assessment, namely task performance
and performance rubrics.
Task is assignment that will be performed to
make performance assessment, while the rubric
consists of a list of criteria that are realized with
work dimensions, process aspects or concepts that
will be assessed and quality gradations ranging from
the most perfect level to a bad level (Zainul, 2005:
13). Important properties in performance
measurement require reliability. Johnson, et al
(2009: 22) state that reliability means the
consistency of scores across such factors as
occasions, tasks, and raters. in others words,
reliability addresses whether examining scores
would be the same if she was to take the exam on a
different occasion, complete different tasks, or
scored by different raters. In the performance
assessment using the inter-rater reliability method, it
requires the assessor to assess or measure some
aspects of the behaviour of students or athletes in the
assignment. To achieve high level of reliability
among raters, it is necessary to design and apply the
rubric. The development of the rubric is very
necessary in the performance assessment, which is
used as the basis for measurement.
Rubrics are guidelines for the product of
assessment. Rubrics or criteria are guidelines for
giving clear scores and agreed upon by teachers and
students (Zainul, 2005: 9). This guide explains to
teachers and students about the standards that exist
in performance (Herman & Winters, 1996: 47).
Lund and Mary (2002: 43) argue that rubric
indicates the criteria for a person scoring
performance-based assessment should use when
doing evaluations. Furthermore, the criteria for
performance evaluation are often called scoring
criteria, scoring guidelines, rubrics, and rubric
scoring but have the same meaning (Lund & Mary,
2002: 44). The design of the assessment rubric
requires specifications of the criteria to assess the
quality of performance and choice of assessment
procedures (Brenan, 2006: 394). The criteria in the
rubric describe the important elements of
performance and become the source of the criteria to
be assessed.
Measurement of Reliability on Volleyball Serve Assessment through Cohen’s Cappa Coefficient Analysis
549
Criteria that are clearly the essence of
performance assessment so students can be assessed
consistently (Arter, 1996: vi). The rubric criteria
used by teachers are product criteria (Guskey 1996b:
4). The product criterion in this case is about the
results that are clearly displayed by athletes in the
volleyball club.
In the process of training- teaching sports in the
club, the product criteria are the performance of the
athlete in the accuracy of the ball towards the
opposing field, the accuracy of the ball being
directed and passed to team mates in the team and to
block the ball from the opponent's smash attack.
Assessment of the performance of volleyball skills
where athletes are asked to display the process
performance of performing sports techniques and
display the results of the accuracy of the ball.
In performance assessment, it involves two kinds
of relevance, namely in accordance with competence
and meaningful in real life. That is, a performance
assessment criteria or indicators must be in
accordance with the competencies or abilities trained
by athletes and meaningful with real life.
2.4 Assessment of Performance-based
Volleyball Skills
In assessing the achievement of the competencies of
athletes in volleyball clubs, the coach needs to apply
comprehensively in assessing the success of
practicing volleyball during training by paying
attention to the indicators of the athlete's abilities /
performance in volleyball which are described from
the training program indicators.
Assessment is an important and inseparable part
of the practice of practicing volleyball, so the coach
will make continuous assessments as part of the
training-coaching situation. Assessment can apply
various ways and use of various assessment tools to
obtain information on the extent to which learners'
learning outcomes or the achievement of
competencies (sets of abilities) of students (Carol,
1994: 5).
Training- coaching volleyball technique involves
many various skill abilities. Skill skills can be
assessed in various ways, observation is one of the
best judgments available. Coaches and athletes can
observe skills and provide assessments designed to
improve the process of practicing volleyball training
in clubs. Observation is an assessment performed by
observing the athlete during the training process and
/ or outside the training activities. Observations are
made to collect qualitative and quantitative data in
accordance with the competencies assessed, and can
be done both formally and informally.
In the process of training, it mostly involves
athlete behaviour, the use of coach observation is
one of them which is currently the most practical.
The coach gives an assignment to display, then sees
how well the athlete's movements behave.
Observations on performance are done to collect
data, so that it can be seen how far the athlete has
mastered a skill based on the performance displayed
during, after, and or after several times practicing
training at the club.
3 RESEARCH METHODS
The type of data in this research was quantitative.
Quantitative data were obtained through the results
of measuring the performance of the technique of
volleyball skills. Pre-match technical process
performance (pre-game), where athletes simulated or
demonstrated each technique of volleyball sports
with indicators: 1) opening or introductory, 2)
warming up, 3) preparatory move, 4) main move, 5)
final move, and 6) closing. Indicators are performed
on serve techniques, bottom fitting, top fitting,
hitting, and blocking mastered by athletes. Data
from the measurement of the performance skills of
the volleyball serve assessment process was
obtained using pre-match assessment instruments
(pre-game).
The instrument of this research used a volleyball
grid to measure the level of achievement of
volleyball serve skills with a volleyball athlete as the
respondent. The data collection technique used the
athlete's performance tasks, namely the athlete's job
performance in the form of pre-match simulation
(pre-game) which was observed using observation
guidelines equipped with a rubric sheet.
The analysis used to find out the reliability
coefficient of the instrument was inter-rater
reliability analysis (inter-rater reliability). The
assessor or rater in the research used 6 (six) raters
and the one who became the rater was the volleyball
coaches who had national coach certification. The
reliability coefficient of the volleyball sports skills
assessment instrument used SPSS assistance with
the Cohen Cappa
K. program The Cohen Cappa K
program aims to find out the understanding of the
assessor, the understanding of the assessor when
observing athletes in performing the pre-game
process with serve techniques that include
introduction, warming up, preparatory move, main
move, final move, and closing. The amount of the
Cohen Cappa coefficient produced compared to the
minimum permissible criteria was 0.70 (Mardapi,
2012). The results of volleyball skill assessment on
volleyball serve technique was analyzed by using
YISHPESS and CoIS 2019 - The 3rd Yogyakarta International Seminar on Health, Physical Education, and Sport Science (YISHPESS
2019) in conjunction with The 2nd Conference on Interdisciplinary Approach in Sports (CoIS 2019)
550
descriptive analysis, which described the assessment
done by athletes during performing performance
tests on serve technique.
The subject of this research consisted of two
elements: 1) athletes totalling 72 male athletes aged
16-20 years who were members of Pengda PBVSI
clubs in Yogyakarta and 2) volleyball coaches
(raters) who were (6) coaches. Determination of
research subjects was taken by random sampling,
with criteria, namely: 1) athletes who had practiced
for more than three years, 2) athletes who had
participated in the competition, and 3) clubs that
developed continuous training, while the reviewers /
trainers were trainers who actively trained in
volleyball clubs in Yogyakarta Special Region.
Measurement of instrument reliability used Cohen’s
Cappa coefficient analysis involving six (6) raters /
assessors when the subject played pre game.
Instruments can be said to be good if the reliability
of the instrument shows that the reliability
coefficient is greater than or equal to 0.60, meaning
that the instrument can provide level of
understanding among the raters.
The type of data in this research is quantitative.
Quantitative data is obtained through the results of
measuring the performance of the technique of
volleyball skills. Pre-match technical process
performance (pre-game), where athletes simulate or
demonstrate each technique of volleyball sports with
indicators: 1) opening or introductory, 2) warming
up, 3) preparatory move, 4) main move, 5) final
move, and 6) closing. Indicators are performed on
serve techniques, bottom fitting, top fitting, hitting,
and dam controlled by athletes. Data from the
measurement of the performance skills of the boa
volley serve assessment process was obtained using
pre-match assessment instruments (pre-game).
The instrument of this research used a volleyball
grid to measure the level of achievement of
volleyball serve skills with a volleyball athlete as the
respondent. The data collection technique used the
athlete's performance tasks, namely the athlete's job
performance in the form of pre-match simulation
(pre-game) which was observed using observation
guidelines equipped with a rubric sheet.
The analysis used to find out the reliability
coefficient of the instrument was inter-rater
reliability analysis (inter-rater reliability). The
assessor or rater in the research used 6 (six) raters
and the one who became the rater was the volleyball
coaches who had national coach certification. The
reliability coefficient of the volleyball sports skills
assessment instrument uses SPSS assistance with the
Cohen Cappa K. program The Cohen Cappa K
program aims to find out the understanding of the
assessor, the understanding of the assessor when
observing athletes in performing the pre-game
process with serve techniques that include
introduction , warming up, preparation move, main
move, final move, and closing. The amount of the
Cappa K Cohen coefficient produced compared to
the minimum permissible criteria is 0.70 (Mardapi,
2012). The results of volleyball skills assessment on
volleyball serve techniques were analysed using
descriptive analysis, which describes the assessment
carried out by athletes during performing
performance tests on serve techniques.
The subject of this research consisted of two
elements, namely: 1) athletes totalling 72 male
athletes between the ages of 16-20 years who were
members of the PBVSI Pengda club in Yogyakarta,
and 2) a volleyball coach (rater) who there are six
(6) trainers. Determination of research subjects was
taken by random sampling, with criteria, namely: 1)
athletes who have practiced for more than three
years, 2) athletes who have participated in the
competition, and 3) clubs that carry out continuous
training, while the reviewers / trainers are trainers
who actively train in volleyball clubs in the Special
Region of Yogyakarta. Measurement of instrument
reliability uses Cohen’s Cappa coefficient analysis
involving six (6) raters / assessors when the subject
plays pre game. Instruments can be said to be good
if the reliability of the instrument shows that the
reliability coefficient is greater than or equal to 0.60,
meaning that the instrument can provide a level of
understanding among the raters.
4 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Data results can be presented by inter-rater
coefficient analysis. The inter-rater coefficient is one
of the means to see the level of consistency or
consistency between the assessors / raters in giving
ratings to the performance of athletes in
demonstrating volleyball skills at the club. For the
purposes of testing the consistency of inter-rater or
appraiser, researchers used the coefficients of
Cohen’s Cappa.
Data collection of the research was done by 6
raters / assessors who gave rating on the assessment
of volleyball serve technique skills. In this
assessment there are 6 (six) items that are the objects
of research, namely, opening / introductory,
warming up, preparation move, main move, final
move, and closing. The summary of the results of
the calculation of consistency and agreement of the
six raters on volleyball skills in serve technique is
presented in Table 1.
Measurement of Reliability on Volleyball Serve Assessment through Cohen’s Cappa Coefficient Analysis
551
Table 1: Results of the K (Cappa) Coefficient among Raters on Volleyball Serve Technique Skill
Item
Raters (Assessors) Mean
.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 3.4 3.5 3.6 4.5 4.6 5.6 (Average)
1 .89 .92 .79 .82 .81 .87 .78 .81 .81 .82 .84 .79 .92 .87 .95 .85
2 .92 .87 .82 .77 .77 .84 .85 .75 .80 .95 .90 .85 .90 .90 .90 .85
3 .82 .84 .76 .79 .83 .86 .79 .77 .84 .84 .91 .81 .84 .88 .86 .83
4 .89 .90 .85 .87 .90 .89 .84 .82 .85 .84 .87 .85 .92 .90 .93 .87
5 .92 .87 .75 .82 .80 .84 .82 .80 .82 .78 .85 .78 .87 .90 .93 .84
6 .88 .95 .76 .83 .81 .84 .83 .76 .83 .81 .88 .81 .83 .90 .83 .84
Mean .89 .88 .79 .82 .82 .86 .83 .78 .83 .84 .88 .82 .87 .90 .89 .85
Overall Mean of Cappa Coefficient 0.85
Table 1 shows that the results of the average K
coefficient (Cappa) serve technique in the opening
item 1 instrument (introduction) with an assessment
of 6 raters are 0.85. The average results of the K
(Cappa) coefficient of serve technique in the item 2
warming up instrument with assessment of 6 raters
are obtained 0.85. The results of the mean K
coefficient (Cappa) serve technique in the item 3 of
the preparatory move with assessment of 6 raters
were obtained 0.83. The average results of the K
(Cappa) coefficient of serve technique in the item 4,
move instrument with gesture move assessment of 6
raters were obtained 0.87. The results of the average
of K coefficient (Cappa) on serve technique in the
final instrument item 5 with 6 rater’s ratings are
obtained 0.84. The results of the mean K coefficient
(Cappa) serve technique in the closing instrument
item 6 with an assessment of 6 raters are obtained
0.84.
The level of consistency and agreement of the
overall assessors in assessing volleyball serve
technique skills at clubs can be determined by taking
the average Cappa Coefficient by six raters 0.85.
The value of 0.85 illustrates that the six assessors
(raters) have perception and understanding of the
valuation construct of 85%. The K (Cappa)
coefficient value is greater than the minimum
criteria used at 0.75, so the instrument meets the
reliability coefficient requirements.
5 CONCLUSION
Based on the research results through Cohen’s
Cappa coefficient analysis, the reliability of serve
technique instruments can be obtained as follows: 1)
Reliability of opening or introductory instrument is
0.85; 2) Reliability of warming up instrument is
0.85; 3) Reliability of the preparatory move
instrument is 0.83; 4) Reliability of the main move
instrument is 0.87; 5) Reliability of the final move
instrument is 0.84; and 6) Reliability of the closing
instrument is 0.84.
From the conclusion above, that the use of the
Cohen’s Cappa coefficient needs to be considered in
measuring the reliability of the instrument because it
produces reliability that satisfies the criteria of good
test.
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