LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT
Types of Tests
Why do we need tests?
In what ways are tests good/bad?
Backwash effect
Impact of tests on teaching and learning
Beneficial/harmful backwash effect
Ex.
Testing and Assessment
Assessment: tests, projects, observation of performance, portfolios, etc.
Tests are one form of assessment
Formative vs. summative
assessment
Formative assessment:
check progress of learning
Summative assessment:
end of program check
Types of tests
(purposes)
Proficiency tests
Diagnostic tests
Placement tests
Achievement tests
Aptitude tests
Admission tests
Progress tests
Language dominance tests
Proficiency tests
Measure general ability in a language
Regardless of previous training
Diagnostic tests
Identify students’ strengths and weaknesses
To benefit future instruction
Difficult to construct. Lack of good ones.
Placement tests
To assign students to classes/programs appropriate to their level of
proficiency
Define characteristics of each level of proficiency
Achievement tests
Measure how successful students are in achieving
objectives of a lesson/course/curriculum
Closely related to the content of a particular
lesson/course/ curriculum
Syllabus content approach OR course objectives
approach?
Final achievement tests / progress achievement
tests (formative assessment)
Frequency?
Aptitude tests
To predict a person’s future success in learning a (any) foreign
language
Taken before actual learning
Admission tests
to provide information about whether a candidate is likely to succeed
Progress tests
tests—to assess students’ mastery of the course material (during the
course)
Language dominance
tests
to assess bilingual learners’ relative strength of the 2 languages
Direct vs. indirect
testing
Direct testing:
testing
-Requires Ss to perform the skill to be measured
Indirect testing:
-Measures the abilities underlying the skills to be
measured
-Ex. A writing test that requires Ss to identify
grammatical errors in sentences
Semi-direct testing:
-tape recorded speaking test
Discrete point vs.
integrative tests
Discrete point tests:
tests
-Focus on one linguistic element at a time
-Assumption: language can be broken down into separate
element
-tend to be indirect
Integrative tests:
tests
-Requires to students to combine many linguistic elements
-Unitary trait/competence hypothesis (Oller)
-tend to be direct
-Ex. Composition, dictation, cloze tests, note-taking
Norm v.s. Criterion-referenced
tests
Test type Criterion-Referenced Tests Norm-Referenced Tests
Purpose To classify students To show how a student’s
according to whether they performance compares to that
have met the established of other test-takers
standards
Result Percentage; descriptive Percentile, grade equivalence
Features Comparison with a set Comparison with other test-
criterion. Direct info on takers. Will be affected by
what the Ss can do. More others’ performance.
motivating. Cut-off score.
Not affected by other test-
takers’ performance.
Example
Criterion vs. Norm-
referenced tests
Strengths and weaknesses?
Objective vs. subjective
tests
Scoring of tests
Objective tests:
tests
-Requires no judgment from the scorer
-Ex. Multiple choice, T/F tests
Subjective tests:
tests
-Requires judgment from the scorer
-Ex. Essay questions, composition
Different degrees of subjectivity
History of language testing
Prescientific period (b/f 1950s)
GTM, reading-oriented methods
Psychometric-structuralist period (1950s-1960s)
structural linguistics, behavioral psychology,
discrete point tests
Integrative-sociolinguistic period (a/f 1960s)
communicative language ability
What is communicative competence?
Communicative
competence
Grammatical competence
Discourse competence
Sociolinguistic competence
Strategic competence
Communicative language
testing
Communicative nature of tasks
Authenticity of tasks
Computer Adaptive Testing
(CAT)
Saves time and effort
Start with average level of difficulty, lower/increase levels of difficulty
according to test taker’s performance
Needs a bank of items graded by difficulty