This document contains three courseworks for a Language Assessment course. Coursework 1 involves observing a classroom and discussing the principles of assessment, including validity, reliability, practicality, authenticity, and washback. Coursework 2 involves designing a language test, including objectives, activities and assessment. Coursework 3 involves reflecting critically on assessment experiences gained from implementing assessments in the classroom.
This document contains three courseworks for a Language Assessment course. Coursework 1 involves observing a classroom and discussing the principles of assessment, including validity, reliability, practicality, authenticity, and washback. Coursework 2 involves designing a language test, including objectives, activities and assessment. Coursework 3 involves reflecting critically on assessment experiences gained from implementing assessments in the classroom.
This document contains three courseworks for a Language Assessment course. Coursework 1 involves observing a classroom and discussing the principles of assessment, including validity, reliability, practicality, authenticity, and washback. Coursework 2 involves designing a language test, including objectives, activities and assessment. Coursework 3 involves reflecting critically on assessment experiences gained from implementing assessments in the classroom.
This document contains three courseworks for a Language Assessment course. Coursework 1 involves observing a classroom and discussing the principles of assessment, including validity, reliability, practicality, authenticity, and washback. Coursework 2 involves designing a language test, including objectives, activities and assessment. Coursework 3 involves reflecting critically on assessment experiences gained from implementing assessments in the classroom.
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The key takeaways are about developing valid and reliable assessment tools that adhere to principles like validity, reliability, practicality, authenticity and washback.
The principles of assessment are that assessment must be valid, reliable, practical, authentic and lead to positive washback.
Some ways to improve assessment mentioned are alternating between self, peer and teacher marking, allowing discussion of tests, and using alternative methods like journals, portfolios and interviews.
INSTITUT PENDIDIKAN GURU
KAMPUS TEMENGGONG IBRAHIM,
JOHOR BAHRU JOHOR DARUL TAZIM
PROGRAM IJAZAH SARJANA MUDA PENDIDIKAN
LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT (TSL 3123)
6 PISMP TESL 4 Coursework 1: Classroom observation Coursework 2: Test Design, Construction and Use in the Language Classroom Coursework 3: Critical Report
NAME : INDEX NUMBER : IC NUMBER : LECTURER : SUBMISSION DATE: 7 TH SEPTEMBER 2014
Coursework 1: Classroom observation. Appendix 1.
Assessment tools are materials that enable you to collect evidence using your chosen assessment method. Assessment tools are the instruments and procedures used to gather and interpret evidence of competence. The instrument is the activity or specific questions used to assess competence by the assessment method selected. An assessment instrument may be supported by a profile of acceptable performance and the decision- making rules or guidelines to be used by assessors. Procedures are the information or instructions given to the candidate and the assessor about how the assessment is to be conducted and recorded. When developing assessment tools, you need to ensure that the principles of assessment are met. This is not only good practice but also a requirement of the language assessment. The assessment principles require that assessment is valid, reliable, practical, authentic and washback. Validity refers to the extent to which the interpretation and use of an assessment outcome can be supported by evidence. An assessment is valid if the assessment methods and materials reflect the elements, performance criteria and critical aspects of evidence in the evidence guide of the unit(s) of competency, and if the assessment outcome is fully supported by the evidence gathered. In my assessment that I implemented on my students, I design it so that it gives similar results to already validate tests or other immediate external criteria. Therefore, the task is at the appropriate level for the pupils whereby it tests on the pupils ability to identify and use the words with phoneme ear and air through listening, forming, finding and filling in the blanks. They have learned the words before answering the worksheet. The task is also appropriate to assess the listening skill. Next, is the reliability of the assessment? Reliability refers to the degree of consistency and accuracy of the assessment outcomes. That is, the extent to which the assessment will provide similar outcomes for candidates with equal competence at different times or places, regardless of the assessor conducting the assessment. Before conducting the assessment, I did my oral assessment with the students using word attack skill. I state few examples and then the others are done by my students. I use picture cards and ask them to pronounce the words by saying the first part of the words and students continue. The words and example are all same in the fill in the blanks questions. So it is almost the same assessment that I give, as the oral test is only for practice and they must do on their own in the worksheet. The results were almost the same. Most of the student score as same as the frequencies of the correct answers in the oral sessions, thus I can conclude that my assessment is reliable. Before we even examine the content of the test, we must ask if it is feasible. A good test must be practical. Whether a test is practical or not is a matter of examining available resources. It may be possible to develop a test which is highly valid and reliable for a particular situation, but if that test requires more resources than what are available, it is doomed. It is possible that the test may initially be used if test development does not exceed available resources. But cutting corners in administering or marking the test, in order to make savings in time or money, will immediately lead to an unacceptable deterioration in reliability. Test practicality involves the nitty-gritty (H.D. Brown, 2001) of man-power, materials and time. We can only make the best use of what is available to us. It refers to facilities available to test developers regarding both administration and scoring procedures of a test. My test is only done in simple one paper worksheet, does not energy and cost consuming. Other than that, the assessment is done in the classroom during the end of the lesson which is the production stage. It is time efficient. From what is stated above, my assessment is practical for daily classroom use. In authenticity of the assessment, this is where my weakness is. I do not use any authentic resources nor natural spoken language for my assessment. The fill-in-the blanks questions are just merely based on the students prior knowledge and it is so simple that students can finish it in a jiffy. It also does not involve any writing, daily conversations, or natural use of target language outside the classroom use. I should involve more example that are low frequencies words and sentences from other resources such as journal or article to expose students with more vocabulary and authentic examples of the phonemes. One way to ensure positive washback is through instructional planning that links teaching and testing. By selecting a test that reflects the instructional and program goals, you can more closely align testing with instruction (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005). Washback, a concept prominent in applied linguistics, refers to the extent to which the introduction and use of a test influences language teachers and learners to do things they would not otherwise do that promote or inhibit language learning. Rephrasing it differently, washback is supposedly done to improve teaching and learning process. This assessment is a positive washback where the fill-in-the blanks questions are observable when assessments and assessment objectives gauge the same skills outlined in the course objectives and taught on a course. Conclusively, I must be always alert in constructing and implementing my lessons and also my assessment for students to have better insight of their own progress of their learning.
Coursework 2: Test design, Construction, and use in Language Classroom.
Subject : English Language Date : Time : Enrolment : Theme : World of knowledge Topic : Hobbies Focal skill : Reading Other skill : Writing Previous knowledge : Students have learned about prepositions such as in, under, behind, in front of. Learning standards : 2.3.1 able to read simple text with guidance: b) Non-fiction 3.1.1 able to write in legible print a) Words b) Phrases Learning outcomes : At the end of the lesson, student should be able to: 1. read simple non-fiction text with guidance 2. able to write at leat 3 words and phrases based on the questions after reading the given text. Stage/Time Content Teaching-Learning Activities Notes/Resources Set Induction
(5 minutes) Questions: What did you do during your free time yesterday? Can you tell me your hobby? 1. students recalling what is being learned in the previous lesson. 2. Students answer few questions regarding previous lessons. CCTS: Creative thinking Making connection M.I : Linguistic Presentation (10 minutes) Title :My friends hobbies. .
1. Students are introduced to the title of the activity. 2.students watch My friends hobbies chart that are being displays in front of the classroom. 3. students will listen when teacher explains the chart. 4. Teacher asks few WH-questions about the chart. 5.Students are divided into 3 groups and come out with own chart by asking their friends hobbies. CCTS: Synthesizing Creating mental pictures analyzing M.I Linguistic Verbal-spatial Interpersonal/intrapersonal Practice
(15 minutes) Title : Sarah the pianist. Worksheet.
1. Students listen when teacher read the story of the Sarah the young pianist. 2. Students do shared reading with teacher. 3. Teacher asks students for words or sentences that they do not understand. 4. Teacher asks students to complete the worksheet in pair based on the text. CCTS: Collect and classify information Analyze Translate information
M.I : Linguistic Interpersonal intrapersonal Production
(15 minutes) Worksheet 2 1. Teacher distributes the worksheet for each student. 2. Students must complete the task in allocated time. 3. Teacher facilitates students with the contextual clues. 4. Teacher and students discuss the answers. CCTS: Making associations application M.I: Intrapersonal Logical linguistic
Coursework 3: Critical Report. Reflection.
There are many insights, knowledge and experiences that I gained from the assessment practice in my classroom. Among the knowledge that I gained is for an assessment to be useful and effective, evaluation and assessment requires planning. Preparing for evaluation should be an integral part of planning each lesson or unit as well as general planning at the beginning of the school year or course. Instruction and evaluation should be considered together in order to ensure that instruction provides itself to evaluation and that the results of evaluation can direct ongoing instructional planning. Moreover, if evaluation is not planned along with instruction, the time required for assessment activities will most likely not be available. As pointed earlier, clearly an important focus of classroom assessment and evaluation is student achievement. Teachers need to know what and how much students have learned in order to monitor the effectiveness of instruction, to plan ongoing instruction, and for accountability purposes. According to Gensee and Upshur (1996), in order to plan and make instruction that is appropriate for individual students or groups of students, it is necessary to understand the factors that influence student performance in class. This means going beyond the assessment of achievement. I believes that teachers need to evaluate constantly their teaching on the basis of student reaction, interest, motivation, preparation, participation, perseverance, and achievement. The conclusions drawn from such an evaluation constitute their main source for measuring the effectiveness of selected learning activities. As a matter of fact, testing in language classes is often inadequate. Before this I was so preoccupied with classroom activities that I fails to maintain a comprehensive perspectives of the flow of the language learning sequence from objectives to activities to testing. This is the point where we can give priority to evaluation over tests claiming that the primary aim of evaluation in the classroom is to judge the achievement of both students and the teacher.
Closure
(5 minutes) Moral values 1. Teacher recaps the lesson. 2. Teacher elicits the moral values from the lesson. 3. Teacher and students gives feedbacks about the lesson. CCTS: Application Making inferences MV: Be friendly and respect each other. Evaluation of achievement is the feedback that makes improvement possible. By means of evaluation, strengths and weaknesses are identified. Evaluation, in this sense, is another aspect of learning, one that enables learners to grasp what they missed previously and the teacher to comprehend what can be done in subsequent lessons to improve learning. To do so, alternative methods (e.g. dialogue journals, portfolio conferences, interviews and questionnaires, observation, etc) are available for collecting useful information about language learning and about student related factors which influence the processes of language teaching and learning. There are still many ways to improve the assessment. Pupil assessment should involve a combination of formal and informal assessment. Teacher must alternates between marking the work themselves, allowing the pupils to mark their own and getting them to mark each others work. Pupils know their targets and their performance is judged against their own goals rather than against the rest of the class. This leads to a positive, secure, encouraging and supportive environment where making mistakes is part of the learning curve, (Patcham, N.D). Pupils will then discuss the test afterwards, allowing them to address any fears, insecurities or simple mistakes and to learn from each other. How assessment is implemented will depend on the pupils, their age and stage, the purpose of the assessment, the subject area and, importantly, the priorities and direction of the school. In school, pupils must be assessed at the end of every topic. The whole point with this is that the pupils can mark the work but I still have to mark them for target purposes as they may not mark them correctly. We can collect all the papers and then hand them back out randomly and we go through the answers as a class. Conclusively, There will be acceptance of the principle that all people can learn under the right conditions. An implication is that "If a program does not achieve the intended goals. Then it is redesigned until it does. There are no learner failures only program failures." (Fantini,1986). An effective, goal-oriented, teaching-learning sequence contains clearly understood objectives, productive classroom activities, and a sufficient amount of feedback to make students aware of the strengths and weaknesses of their performances.
References 1. Alderson, J. C. & Hamp-Lyons, L. (1996). TOEFL preparation courses: A study of washback. Language Testing. 13, 280-297. 2. Bachman, L. (1991). Fundamental Considerations in Language Testing, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 3. Buck, G. (2001). Assessing Listening. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 4. Crocker, L., & Algina, J. (1986). Introduction to classical and modern test theory. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth. 5. Davidson, F. & B. K. Lynch (2002). Testcraft: A Teacher's Guide to Writing and Using Language Test Specifications.London: Yale University Press. 6. International Language Testing Association (ILTA) (2002). http://www.surrey.ac.uk/ELI/ILTA/faqs 7. Multilingual Glossary of Language Testing Terms (1998). Edited by ALTE members. 8. Wall, D. (1997). Impact and Washback in Language Testing. In C. Clapham & D. Corson (eds), Encyclopaedia of Language and Education 7: Language Testing and Assessment, 291-302. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. 9. Weigle, S. C. (2002). Assessing Writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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