Classroom Language Test-S
Classroom Language Test-S
a) Language Aptitude Tests c) Placement Tests e) Achievement Tests 2) Some Practical Steps to Test Construction a) Assessing Clear, Unambiguous Objectives b) Drawing Up Test Specifications b) Proficiency Tests d) Diagnostic Tests
Before start: a) What is the purpose of the test? b) What are the objectives of the test? c) How will the test specifications reflect the purpose and the objectives? d) How will the test tasks be selected and the seperate items arranged? e) What kind of scoring, grading and/or feedback is expected?
TEST TYPES
1) 2) 3) 4) 5) Language aptitude test Proficiency test Placement test Diagnostic test Achievement test
1)Language aptitude test: Predicts capacity & general ability to learn It has limitation and flaw- prediction is not easy Two standardized tests in the US: MLAT & PLAB
Task in the modern language aptitude test (MLAT) 1. Number learning : Examinees must learn a set of numbers through aural input and then discriminate different combination of those numbers. 2. Phonetic script : Examinees must team a set of correspondences between speech sounds and phonetic symbols. 3. Spelling dues : Examinees must need words that are spelled some what phonetically 4. Word in sentence : Examinees are given a key word in a sentence and are then asked to select a word in second sentence that performs the same grammatical action as the key word. 5. Paired associates : Examinees must quickly team a set of vocabulary words from another language and memorize their English meaning.
2) Proficiency test:
Not limited to any one course, curriculum, or
No diagnostic feedback
3) Placement Test aims to place a student into a particular level or section of language curriculum or school has various types: comprehension and production questions, responding through written and oral performance, selection (multiple - choice) and gap-filling formats
4) Diagnostic Test Provides information on what to focus later Shows lacks, difficulties, misunderstandings etc
5) Achievement Tests Should be limited to particular material (content-time) needs to be related to classroom lessons, units, or a total curriculum supposed to be in accordance with the objectives
While revising the draft: 1)Are the directions to each section clear? 2) Is there an example item for each section? 3) Does each item measure a specified objective? 4) Is each item stated in clear, simple language? 5) Are the multiple choice items, distracters appropriate? 6) Is the difficulty of each item appropriate? 7) Is the language authentic? 8) Does the test reflect the learning objectives?
DESIGNING MULTIPLE CHOICE TEST ITEMS receptive and selective, not productive a stem and several options or alternatives to choose from One of those options, the key, is the correct response, while the others serve as distractions.
Written properly, multiple choice exams correlate strongly with assessments by descriptive tests
Brown, Robert, Multiple Choice Versus Descriptive Tests Frontiers in Education Conference, Reno NC 2001.
Only recognition knowledge Guessing ??? Restricted Difficult to write Harmful washback Cheating ???
Number of Questions 1 2 4 6 10 20 50
50 75 69 66 62 59 56
33 56 41 32 21 9.2 1
25 44 26 17 8 1.4 .01
20 36 18 10 3 .3 .0004
Multiple Choice
Difficult Easy Short High
Where did George go after party last night ? a. Yes, he did b. Because he was tired c. To Elaines place for another party d. Around eleven oclock.
The specific objective being tested here is comprehension of wh-questions. Distractor (a) is designed to ascertain that the student knows the difference between an answer to a whyquestion and a yes/no question. Distractors (b) and (d), as well as the key item (c) test comprehension of the meaning of where as opposed to why and when. The objective has been directly addressed.
3. Make certain that the intended answer is clearly the only correct one
Example:
Where did George go after party last night ? a. Yes, he did b. Because he was tired c. To Elaines place for another party d. He went home around eleven oclock. Distractor D seems to be acceptable as well, so it should be omitted.
4. Use item indices to accept, discard or revise items a) Item facility (easy or difficult?) b) Item discrimination (differentiating low-ability and highability students) c) Distractor efficiency (appropriate or not?)
Grading
The country, and context of this English
classroom, Institutional expectations (most of them unwritten), implicit definitions of grades that you have set
forth
Explicit and relationship you have established with this class The expectations that have been engendered in previous tests and quizzes in this class Student expectations
FEEDBACK Classroom test insider the multitude of options. You might choose to return the test to the student with one of or a combination of, any of the possibilities below. 1. A latter grade 2. A Total Score 3. Four Sub scores (speaking, listening, reading, writing) 4. For the listening and reading sections
Teachers High scores = good instruction Low scores = poor students Students High scores = smart, well-prepared Low scores = poor teaching, bad test