Grade 12 English Assessment Plan
Grade 12 English Assessment Plan
Level 8.1
Grade 12 General
Grade 12 Applied
Term 3
2023 – 2024
Overview
In this assessment planner, you will find all of the tools and information you need to plan and implement Term 3 assessments. While
every effort has been made to provide complete and accurate information in this document, there is a possibility that elements of the
assessment plan will be updated as the term progresses. If the need arises, updates will be communicated as soon as the assessment
team is aware of the change.
Level Alignments
Level alignments allow you to access and understand targeted learning outcomes and assessment goals for your students. Level
alignments include the English Language Curriculum Framework for Excellence (ECFE) Level, the Literacy Level, the CEFR Level, the
Lexile Range, the Global Scale of English level, a list of National and International Assessments, and a list of assessed curriculum
frameworks.
Term 3 Assessments
In Term 3 Assessments, you will find a list of all assessments for the term including the assessment type, weights for the term and the
academic year, potential Continuous Assessment tasks, and a brief description of each End of Term assessment.
National and
Curriculum ECFE Level Literacy Level Phase CEFR Level Lexile Range GSE Level International
Assessment
Assessment Description
In Term 3, continuous assessment is written by teachers based on the individual needs of their
students. A continuous assessment guide and materials are available on the English assessment
Continuous Assessment
SharePoint and on LMS. Teachers are encouraged to develop their own continuous assessment
program tailored to the gaps identified by the diagnostic and summative assessments and also
formative assessment conducted during usual classroom practice. A bank of teacher-created
resources is available on the English assessment SharePoint.
As the culmination of the term’s work, students are asked to demonstrate their accomplishments in
reading and writing. Students will be asked to respond to an informative writing prompt with three bullet
points that corresponds to the topics in the assessment coverage. They will first be asked for their
opinion about the essay topic. They will then produce a plan for how they will answer the essay prompt.
Both the initial opinion response and plan will be marked by the teacher using holistic rubrics. Students
will then produce an extended response, the expected length of which is detailed in the specifications
SwiftAssess Summative
Assessment First Part
below. The extended response will be marked against an emerging, developing and mastery rubric to
generate useful data that can be used formatively. They will then be presented with an extended text
and will answer a free-response reading question by inferring information that is not explicitly
mentioned in the text. They will justify their answer to that question by drawing on relevant evidence
from the text in their explanations. The free-response questions will be marked using rubrics. The
writing assessment and inference section will constitute 40% of the summative assessment marks for
this term.
In the first part, students will be presented with a MAZE text with five gaps that will assess the
prerequisite language needed to access the level. They will select the option that represents the
correct grammatical, functional language or vocabulary point to fill the gaps. The next part is a MAZE
SwiftAssess Summative
Assessment Second Part with ten gaps that will assess the level’s coverage. Students will then answer multiple-choice questions
about a below-level reading text that will assess prerequisite reading comprehension skills. Next,
students will answer multiple-choice reading comprehension questions about an at-level text. This
assessment will constitute 60% of the summative assessment marks for this term.
Continuous Assessment
Suggested Continuous Assessment for Term 3. These are not mandatory. Select tasks appropriate to your students’ needs.
ENG.08.2.3.XX.031 Read and identify specific information Students are given a topic that aligns with the coverage topics. They research
in extended texts on concrete and some abstract topics.
and write a presentation on the topic, either individually, in pairs or as a group.
ENG.08.2.3.XX.032 Read and understand details in They present to the class.
extended texts on concrete and some abstract topics.
ENG.08.2.3.XX.036 Make connections when reading Potential to reinforce learning of language structures by requiring their inclusion
extended texts on familiar and unfamiliar concrete topics.
Project presentation in the presentation.
ENG.06.4.3.XX.011 Use own and others’ ideas to plan and
develop writing.
Potential to assess speaking and listening outcomes if a question and answer
ENG.08.4.2.XX.019 Maintain a degree of control of simple session forms part of the presentation to the class.
and complex language structures in writing.
ENG.08.4.3.XX.016 Write extended texts on familiar and Potential for peer assessment.
unfamiliar concrete topics.
Students are given an activity in groups. Suggested tasks include:
Quizzes Dependent on quiz content. They could also have a lexical focus and assess students’ vocabulary.
ENG.08.2.3.XX.030 Read and understand the overall Students are either set a text to read or are directed to choose a text or book to
meaning of extended texts on concrete and some abstract read. This could be linked to Literature Lessons from the coursebook, if
topics.
available.
ENG.08.2.3.XX.031 Read and identify specific information
in extended texts on concrete and some abstract topics.
Students either produce a general report on what they have read that
ENG.08.2.3.XX.032 Read and understand details in summarises the main points (writing outcomes could also be assessed here).
extended texts on concrete and some abstract topics.
Reading journal They could reflect in basic terms about what they have read. Alternatively, a
ENG.08.2.3.XX.035 Identify the mood and tone in series of questions could be posed that lead them to provide a detailed report.
extended texts on familiar and some unfamiliar concrete
topics. Questions could involve students describing characters, settings, events, or
listing new vocabulary or language structures they have encountered by
ENG.08.2.3.XX.036 Make connections when reading
extended texts on familiar and unfamiliar concrete topics.
reading. Students could also present their reports to the class and discussions
around the themes raised could provide opportunities to assess speaking
LL5.R.P.2 Consider how information from complex,
extended texts can be used after reading or listening.
outcomes.
Students select pieces of work they have completed for inclusion in their
portfolio. Students complete a reflection task where they could explain why
Dependent on task chosen. A wide range of they have chosen the pieces of work, what they learned when doing them and
Portfolio evaluation outcomes can be assessed from each domain. what they could do to improve their work for next time.
SwiftAssess Exam First Part: 40% of SwiftAssess Exam Second Part: 60% of
summative assessment term grade summative assessment term grade
Understand and
recall 1 Opinion 5% 5 Below-level MAZE 13.33%
Application and Understand and
analysis recall (c.25%)
Higher-order 2 Plan 5% 6 At-level MAZE 13.33%
thinking
Inference question 2%
Higher-order At-level reading text
4 9 5.36%
thinking (5%) questions
Justification question 3%
Reading and Writing Summative Assessment Specifications
SwiftAssess exam first part
ECFE Alignment: Level 8.1 Term Weighting: 40% Domain: Reading and Writing
B2 - B2+
Higher-order thinking
Inference - 2 marks, marked using a
rubric
C: Advanced application
LL6.R.In.1 Infer complex information
needed for comprehension when it is not A free-response inference question
Free-response question Phase 6
directly stated in a wide range of complex, that tests deep understanding of the
__________________
extended texts. text.
C1
Part 4
Read the text and answer
LL6.R.P.2 Consider how information from a Justification – 3 marks, marked
the question. Use full Text:
wide range of complex, extended texts can using a rubric
sentences. - extended
be used after reading or listening. - concrete and abstract topics
A free-response justification of the
- narrative
student’s answer to the inference
question.
Text length: 400 words
SwiftAssess exam second part
A: Foundational proficiency
Phase 5
MAZE task 5 questions
multiple-choice questions
ENG.07.2.2.XX.016 Identify a wide range B1+ - B2
__________________ Gap-fill sentences within a MAZE
Part 5 of features of text organisation and
text that test students’ awareness of
structure. Text:
Read the text and answer basic grammar and sentence
- extended
a, b or c. phrasing.
- familiar and some unfamiliar concrete
topics
- informative
B: Grade-level mastery
A: Foundational proficiency
6 questions
ENG.07.2.3.XX.024 Read and identify Phase 5
Multiple-choice questions specific information in extended texts on
Multiple-choice reading
__________________ familiar and unfamiliar concrete topics. B1+ - B2
comprehension questions that
Part 7
demonstrate application of reading
Read the text and answer ENG.07.2.3.XX.025 Read and understand Text:
skills.
a, b or c. details in extended texts on familiar and - extended
unfamiliar concrete topics. - familiar and some unfamiliar concrete
Answers explicitly stated.
topics
- narrative
B: Grade-level mastery
4 questions
Phase 5
Multiple choice questions
ENG.08.2.3.XX.033 Read and identify the Multiple-choice reading
__________________
main points of extended texts on concrete comprehension questions that B2 - B2+
Part 9
and some abstract topics. demonstrate application of reading
Read the text and answer
skills. Text:
a, b or c.
- extended
Answers implicitly stated. - concrete and abstract topics
- narrative