Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

WEEK 1 – TOPIC 1 OVERVIEW OF ASSESSMENT: CONTEXT, ISSUES AND TRENDS 1.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "WEEK 1 – TOPIC 1 OVERVIEW OF ASSESSMENT: CONTEXT, ISSUES AND TRENDS 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 WEEK 1 – TOPIC 1 OVERVIEW OF ASSESSMENT: CONTEXT, ISSUES AND TRENDS 1

2 TERMINOLOGY Assessment: The process of gathering information to make informed decisions. Test: An instrument or systematic procedure for measuring a sample of behaviors by posing a set of questions in a uniform manner. Measurement: Process of obtaining a numerical description of the degree to which an individual possesses a particular characteristic. Evaluation : refers to the process of making judgments, assigning value, or deciding worth. 2

3 ASSESSMENT In educational practice assessment:  refers to the full range of information gathered and synthesized by teachers about their students and their classrooms.  is a continuous process and is tied to instruction.  can be gathered through- informal means such as through observation and verbal exchange. formal means such as homework, tests and written reports, 3

4 ASSESSMENT All situation included over time An on-going process Includes multiple samples of behavior, not just one single judgment or test 4

5 TESTS Test: An instrument or activity used to accumulate data on a person’s ability to perform a specified task. A subset of assessment (a genre of assessment technique) 5

6 ASSESSMENT VS. TESTING Testing is assessment, assessment is not testing Assessment should be ongoing 6

7 CONTENTS Why tests? Problems of many tests Quality of a good test History of different approaches Comparison: measurement, test, evaluation, and assessmentmeasurementtest evaluationassessment Relationship between measurement, test, evaluation, and assessment Relationship between measurement, test, evaluation, and assessment Homework 7

8 WHY TESTS? Achievement of learners Selection among competitions Comparison for levels/ranking Examination/Evaluation on teaching methods Betterment of tests Pressure on professionals 8

9 OTHER USES OF TESTS Motivation Achievement Improvement Diagnosis Prescription Grading Classification Prediction 9

10 PROBLEMS OF MANY TESTS Poor Reliability Poor Validity Not Practical Negative Backwash Backwash: the effect of testing on teaching and learning 10

11 QUALITY OF A GOOD TEST A Good Test should … be valid be reliable be practical have beneficial backwash 11

12 QUALITY OF A GOOD TEST A test is said to be :  reliable when it produces dependable results consistently.  valid when it measures what it claims to measure.  fair if it offers all students the same chance to doing well and if it does not discriminate against a particular group of students because of race, ethnicity, or gender. 12

13 HISTORY OF DIFFERENT APPROACHES 1. The Essay Translation Approach The Essay Translation Approach 2. The Structuralist Approach The Structuralist Approach 3. Integrative Approach Integrative Approach 4. Communicative Approach Communicative Approach 13

14 THE ESSAY TRANSLATION APPROACH Also called Grammar-translation Approach Before 1950s Pre-scientific: required no special expertise in testing; based on T’s intuition & experience Subjective Testing = Art Anyone can make a test. Not reliable 14

15 THE STRUCTURALIST APPROACH Also called Psychometric Structuralist Approach Early 1950s - late1960s Decontextualized, discrete-point tests Tries to include more samples of the test taker’s ability at the same time Testing = Science (objective & reliable) Test one single area at a time Emphasis: form & structure Standard Format—Multiple-Choice 15

16 INTEGRATIVE APPROACH 1970s – early 1980s Under the influence of psycholinguistics and sociolinguistics Testing of language in context May test more than one skill at a time (e.g., cloze) Emphasis: meaning 16

17 COMMUNICATIVE APPROACH 1980s – NOW Emphasis: language use—how people use language for different purposes Uses authentic materials from the real life Has to use language both accurately and appropriately 17

18 Measurement and Evaluation 18

19 MEASUREMENT Quantifies the characteristics (both physical and mental) of persons Examples: height, motivation, aptitude Involves both tests and non-tests 19

20 MEASUREMENT A measurement takes place when a “test” is given and a “score” is obtained. If the test collects quantitative data, the score is a number. If the test collects qualitative data, the score may be a phrase or word such as “excellent.” 20

21 EXAMPLE: TEST Reading/writing tests A procedure designed to get specific samples of a person’s ability A measurement instrument 21

22 EVALUATION Evaluations are either formative or summative. It can be: Quantitative Numbers involved; e.g., scores or Qualitative Analyze data; e.g., letters of reference Systematic gathering of information for decision making Determination of adequacy 22

23 Assessment Evaluation Measurement (test) Measurement (non-test) SUMMARY 23

24 HOMEWORK Read Chapter One Read Handout One: Brown, J. D. Testing in Language Programs. NJ: Prentice Hall Regents, 1996. (pp. 2-15) 24


Download ppt "WEEK 1 – TOPIC 1 OVERVIEW OF ASSESSMENT: CONTEXT, ISSUES AND TRENDS 1."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google