It is important to select the type of test tasks the students are going to deal with in the test.
Friday, December 9, 2011
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Assesing English Lenguage Learners
Administering Assessment
Chapter VIII
Create a positive attitude toward testing: use test to motivate students
telling them that their results help them to learn.
Be transparent: Explain what is the test and the results for.
Follow proctoring instructions or instructions in the test manual to the
letter: for results to be interpreted meaningfully, a test must be administered
under standard conditions.
Prepare policies and procedures well in advance: make sure that everyone
involved is aware of policies and procedures.
Explain to the students the distinction between teaching and testing:
group and pair work activities are important in teaching, in testing the mail
goal is to assess individually.
Refrain from helping students who are having difficulty: It’s mainly
because it’s not fair for students who have prepared sufficiently.
Note unexpected events that might interfere with assessment: take into
consideration special issues that can affect when interpreting information for
the test.
Adopt special needs assessment policy: It’s a must.
Inform students of consequences of academic dishonesty: explain the
consequences of cheating and the institution policy about it.
Minimize the opportunities of cheating
and plagiarism.
Assessing English Language Learners
Ten Things to Remember About Student Test-Taking Skills
Chapter VII
Student test-taking skills are really good skills:
think on teaching and testing working together to build better language skills.
Build skill strategies into the classroom teaching:
Whenever possible, highlight skills strategies and allow time for regular
practice.
Spend time on reading and following instructions: Reading and following instructions is a
real-life task. Spend time on in is valuable for the students.
Familiarize your students with a range of formats:
constantly introduce new formats and allow plenty of time to practice them.
Promote and reward good planning: Foster a positive
attitude toward by rewarding students who make an effort.
Discuss and practice timing issues: Promote developing
time management skills in students’ provident timed tasks.
Encourage a variety of review activities: If is
possible provide time, space and materials to help the students to review
efficiently.
Remind students of the importance of rest, recreation
and diet in exams periods.
Provide students with helpful feedback: It helps them
to improve.
Active encourage learner autonomy through
self-assessment: Regularly use self-assessment techniques to foster autonomy.
Friday, December 2, 2011
Assessing English Language Learners http://www.slideshare.net/yoguitika/choosing-and-devising-test-tasks |
http://www.slideshare.net/yoguitika/special-needs-8409290
Students with special needs motivational presentation for teachers and students.
Students with special needs motivational presentation for teachers and students.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Assessing English Language Learners
Chapter VI Assessing Speaking
Assessing Speaking can be divided by the
purpose. In daily life is an important mean of communication, give and receive
messages, communicate. In academic programs is focused on presentations of
information. In business English the focus is on telephone, customer services
skills, make reports or interact in meetings. Depending on the program , the
assessment must reflect the course objectives.
Speaking is a complex skill that also depends
on other skills such as pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary, fluency and
comprehension. The main issue when assessing speaking is the time consuming
when applying the test individually for large groups.
The following considerations must be taken in
to account when designing assessment tasks for speaking: choose tasks that
generate positive washback for teaching and learning, these tasks should be
authentic as possible, allow time for warm up, keep skill contamination in
mind, large samples of language are more reliable, use a range of appropriate
techniques, ensure reliable scoring by choosing appropriate scales, train
teachers in scoring, personalize the test using students’ names, never mark the
test in front of the students.
The following techniques for assessment speaking
are commonly used and finding an
appropriate scale for scoring each one is a must: oral presentations, debates,
reading aloud, retelling stories, verbal essays and extemporaneous speaking.
Assessing English Language Learners
Chapter V Assessing Listening
As reading, listening is an invisible and
interactive skill, again bottom up
and top down processes are involve
actively constructing meaning. However,
this skill has been neglected emphasizing productive skills. There are 3
approaches to listening: discrete point
(brakes the listening in to components assessed separately), the integrative approach (like in dictation
and cloze tasks, it integrates the components) and the communicative approach (understand the message and use it in
context).
Before designing assessment tasks, is important
to differentiate academic and general listening. In
general listening 33 micro skills have been identified, such as:
clustering, recognizing, redundancy, comprehending reduced forms and
hesitations, pauses, false starts and corrections, understanding colloquial
language, processing prosodic features, understanding and using rules of
conversation interaction, etc. For
academic listening there are some higher micro skills that include: identifying
the purpose of a lecture and its logical development, understand the
relationship among discourse units, recognize lexical terms, etc.
It is important to take in to account that in
spite of the difficulties of assessing the skill, it has to be assessed.
Reading aloud must be changed for real listening texts (conversations for
example), give credit for what the students know ( focus on listening
comprehension only), give importance to the background knowledge, Focus on
meaning, give a purpose for listening, don’t expect full comprehension, use
listening task in which reading or writing is done a little, assess all types
of listening.
Good techniques assessing listening are: are:
phonemic discrimination, paraphrase recognition, objective formats: (Multiple
Choice (three options only), T/F, Short Answer, cloze, dictation, information
transfer and note taking.
Assessing English Language Learners
Chapter IV Assessing Writing
Writing is a high estimated skill especially by
employers and higher education. There are multiple tasks which assess writing
focusing on the organization of ideas, clarity of the message and
mechanics. There are two main approaches
to writing: the indirect measures of
writing assessment more related to accuracy than communication, it assesses
punctuation, spelling and sentence construction; and the direct measures of writing assessment that assesses communication
based on production, integrating all the elements: grammar, content,
vocabulary, conventions and syntax.
Consider giving multiple writing assessment
tasks and opportunities to the students and test use them. Contextualize tasks
for the students’ needs, mark only what is written, evaluate all answers from
one question before continuing with the next. Have a systematic approach for
dealing with marking discrepancies, get the students involve in their
assessment, provide feedback, practice blind marking, and make the necessary
adjustments for the marking criteria by using them in practices. Take in to
account that writing is a visible
skill, so that, the use of rubrics help the teacher to be more objective when
scoring.
Some sample techniques for writing are: free
writing and guided writing. Assessment
can be done by the Student-teacher conferences, self-assessment, peer
assessment and portfolio-based assessment.
When writing specifications, deal with the
selection of the rubrics and criteria for writing scales that includes the
selection of holistic (more integrating marks) and analytical (specific
purposes for writing) scales and select the benchmarks.
Assessing English Language Learners
Chapter III
Assessing Reading
Reading is an invisible and interactive skill.
Teachers cannot see what is going on in the mind of the students while reading.
It gives it a difficult to assess connotation. However, there are a variety of
sub skills that can help to assess the reading abilities. On the other hand,
it’s interactive because while reading, students think on possibilities, search
in their background knowledge, guess and construct meaning.
For
reading purposes, bottom up and top down process are needed among other
approaches to reading that help to make it more efficiently. In addition there are some sub skills that
make reading a skill easier to assess: skimming, scanning, read for main ideas,
fact and opinion, information transfer, drawing inferences, understanding
vocabulary, sentences, understanding meaning. Some considerations when
assessing reading have to be taken: the assessment has to match the reading
program, use sample of reading sub skills with different tasks types that at
the same time have to be selected from a range, nonlinear and prose texts must
be used, authenticity must be used as much as possible, the entire text must be
exploited, grammar and vocabulary must be included in context, grammar and
vocabulary are focused as sub skills, critical thinking and inferencing must be
encouraged and assessed, timing should be considering when skimming and
scanning.
Some recommendable tasks when assessing reading
are: questions, they must be slightly lower than the reading passage, with the
same order as the information in the text. Cloze tests for specific vocabulary.
Multiple choice and true/false tasks are ideal for main ideas and supporting
details, short answer tasks such as scanning focus on main idea or details.
Assessing English Language Learners
Introduction
Chapter I
Introduction
*What
is the meaning of evaluation assessment,
and testing? Evaluation refers to the whole process of teaching-learning. It
involves course syllabus, activities and testing. Assessment refers to the
possible activities and instruments that a teacher selects in order to check
the progress of the students in the learning process. Finally, testing is a category of the assessment and
it’s “a procedure” to obtain measurable results from the teaching-learning
process.
*Assessment
tasks are designed for that purpose, and the teacher must select the ones that
best fulfills the needs according to the context: placement,
aptitude, diagnostic, progress, achievement and proficiency tests are the
most common categories. However, there are other categorizations such as: objective
versus subjective tests, Criterion-Referenced versus Standardized tests,
Summative versus formative, High stakes versus low stakes tests. There are nine
principles that heads good test design: usefulness (intended use), validity
(content, construct and face), reliability (application time-score relation),
practicality, wash back (effect of testing), Authenticity, Transparency
(accurate info) and Security.
Chapter II
*The process of
developing assessment starts with planning, development, administration,
analysis, feedback and reflection. It is very important to work in the
specifications and students’ preparation. The techniques for testing includes the type of items
that are going to be taken in to account when designing a test. It also
involves common violations teachers do: grammar mistakes, ambiguous answers and
double answer key are very common.
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