Language Testing and Evaluation Chapter 2: Principles of Language Assessment
Language Testing and Evaluation Chapter 2: Principles of Language Assessment
Language Testing and Evaluation Chapter 2: Principles of Language Assessment
• Introduction
• Problem: How do you know if a test is
effective?
• Solution: Apply the five main criteria
that will help you “to test a test”:
– practicality
– reliability
– validity
– authenticity
– washback
Chapter 2: PRINCIPLES OF LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT
(Brown, 2004)
1. Practicality
• A test is practical if
– it is not very expensive
– it is appropriate in terms of time
– it is easy to administer
– it its scoring procedure is specific and
time-efficient.
Chapter 2: PRINCIPLES OF LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT
(Brown, 2004)
2. Reliability
• Reliability means consistency and dependability.
If you give the same test to the same student or
matched students on two different occasions, the
test should yield similar results. The factors that
contribute to the reliability or unreliability are:
2.1 Student-related reliability: The learner-related
reliability is caused by:
– temporary illness
– fatigue
– a ‘bad day’
– anxiety
– other physical or psychological factors
– a test-taker’s “test-wiseness”
– a test taker’s strategies for efficient test taking
Chapter 2: PRINCIPLES OF LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT
(Brown, 2004)
3. Validity
Definitions:
• A test is said to be valid if it measures accurately
what it is intended to measure (Hughes, 1992:22)
• Validity means “the extent to which inferences
made from assessment results in appropriate,
meaningful, and useful in terms of the purpose of
the assessment” (Grondlund 1998:226)
Chapter 2: PRINCIPLES OF LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT
(Brown, 2004)
2. Criterion-related evidence
Definitions:
– The extent to which the “criterion” of the test has
(Hughes 1992:23).
Chapter 2: PRINCIPLES OF LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT
(Brown, 2004)