4. Кредит-модуль тизимида якуний назорат қандай шаклларда ўтказилади
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4. Кредит-модуль тизимида якуний назорат андай шаклларда ўткази
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Sociolinguistic competence Google Slides is most similar to which of the following programs?mic.power point The drop-down arrow next to the New Slide commands lets you choose ________.slide layouts When presenting your slide show, what are some of the ways you can advance to the next slide? Select all that apply.pressing the spacebar What is the fastest way to change all of the slide layouts and colors of your presentation?apply anew theme Which feature does this image demonstrate?a transition applied to slide Let's say you want to add a company logo to the bottom-right corner of every slide. What's the most efficient way to do this?insert a logo on master slide A(n) ___________ is comprised of our active vocabularies, our pronunciation of words, and our grammar and syntax when talking or writing. idiolect. 2.Which of the following is NOT characteristic of language?Language is concrete.. 3.Which of the following is NOT true of connotative meanings?Meanings have concrete definition.. 4.Saying “LOL” when responding to someone in a technology environment is an example of Jargon.. To improve message ___________, one must use specific, concrete, and precise language. semantics. All of the following are conversational maxims EXCEPT: Pause before speaking.. In conversation, which of the following maxims may be violated? None of the above. Using inclusive language when you are with a wide swath of people is also known as: linguistic sensitivity. Assessment appraising or estimating the level of magnitude of some attribute of a person (ongoing process) tests subset of assessment, genre of assessment technique (method and a measure) performance one's actual "doing" of language in the form of speaking and writing (production) and listening and reading (comprehension) competence one's hypothesized (empirically unobservable) underlying ability to perform language measurement process of quantifying the observed performance of classroom learners evaluation when the results of a test (or other assessment procedure) are used for decision making. Interpretation of information. (can take place w/o measurement) rubrics statements that describe what a student can perform at a particular point on a rating scale; sometimes also called band descriptors informal assessment incidental, unplanned comments and responses, along with coaching and other impromptu feedback to the student (embedded in classroom tasks) formal assessment exercises or procedures specifically designed to tap into a storehouse of skills and knowledge. Systematic, planned sampling techniques constructed to give teacher and student an appraisal of student achievement. formative assessment evaluating students in the process of "forming" their competencies and skills with the goal of helping them to continue that growth process. summative assessment measures or summarizes what a student has grasped and typically occurs at the end of a course or unit of instruction norm-referenced test a test in which each test-taker's score is interpreted in relation to a mean, median, standard deviation, and/or percentile rank criterion-referenced test a test designed to give test-takers feedback, usually in the form of grades, on specific courses or lesson objectives; the distribution of students' scores across a continuum may be of little concern achievement test a test used to determine whether course objectives have been met - and appropriate knowledge and skills acquired - by the end of a given period of instruction diagnostic test a test that is designed to diagnose specified aspects of a language placement test a test meant to place a student into a particular level or section of a language curriculum or school proficiency test a test that is not limited to any one course, curriculum, or single skill in the language; rather, it tests overall global ability gate-keeping playing the role of allowing or denying someone passage into the next stage of an educational (or commercial, political, etc.) process constructs the specific definition of an ability, often not directly measurable (ex. fluency) but which can be inferred from observation aptitude test measures capacity or general ability to learn a foreign language (BEFORE taking course) discrete-point test assessments designed on the assumption that language can be broken down into its component parts and that those parts can be tested successfully psychometric structuralism a movement in language testing that seized the tools of the day to focus on issues of validity, reliability, and objectivity integrative test a test that treats language competence as a unified set of interacting abilities of grammar, vocabulary, reading, writing, speaking, and listening cloze a text in which words are deleted and the test-taker must provide a word that fits the blank space dictation a method of assessment in which test-takers listen to a text and write down what they hear unitary trait hypothesis the position that vocabulary, grammar, the "four skills," and other discrete points of language cannot be disentangled from each other in language performance communicative test a test that elicits a test-takers' ability to use language that is meaningful and authentic strategic competence the ability to employ communicative strategies to compensate for breakdowns as well as to enhance the rhetorical effect of utterances in the process of comunication performance-based assessment assessment that typically involves oral production, written production, open-ended responses, integrated performance (across skill areas), group performance, and other interactive tasks task-based assessment assessments that involved learners in actually performing the behavior that on purports to measure practicality the extent to which resources and time available to design, develop, and administer a test are manageable and feasible reliability the extent to which a test yields consistent and dependable results test-wiseness knowledge of strategies for guessing, maximizing the speed, or otherwise optimizing test task performance inter-rater reliability condition in which two or more scorers yields consistent scores for the same test intra-rater reliability condition in which the same scorer yields consistent scores across all tests subjective tests tests in which the absences of predetermined or absolutely correct responses require the judgement of the teacher to determine correct and incorrect answers objective tests tests that have predetermined fixed responses validity the extent to which inferences made from assessment results are appropriate, meaningful, and useful in terms of the purpose of the assessment content-related validity the extend to which a test actually samples the subject matter about which conclusions are to be drawn direct testing an assessment method in which the test-taker actually performs the target task; as opposed to indirect testing indirect testing an assessment method in which the test-taker is not required to perform the target task; rather, inference is made from performance on non-target tasks; as opposed to direct testing criterion-related validity the extent to which the linguistic criteria of a the test (e.g., specified classroom objectives) are measured and implied predetermined levels of performance are actually reached...POPHAM: the degree to which student performance on the assessment predicts performance in another context concurrent validity the extent to which results of a tests are supported by other relatively recent performance beyond the test itself predictive validity the extent to which results of a test are used to gauge future performance construct validity any theory, hypothesis, or model that attempts to explain observed phenomena in one's universe of perceptions consequential validity a test's impact, including such considerations as its accuracy in measuring intended criteria, its effect on the preparation of a test-takers, and the (intended and unintended) social consequences of a test's interpretation and use impact the effect of the use of a test on individual test-takers, institutions, and society face validity the extent to which a test-taker views the assessment as fair, relevant, and useful for improving learning authenticity the degree of correspondence of the characteristics of a given language test task to the features of a target language task washback the effect of assessments on classroom teaching and learning specification (specs) planned objectives, features, methods, and structure of a test biased for best providing conditions for a student's optimal performance on a test test usefulness the extent to which a test accomplishes its intended objectives multiple-choice tests an assessment instrument in which items offer the test-taker a choice among two or more listed options receptive (selective) response test items that require the test-taker to select rather than produce a response such as true/false or multiple-choice stem the stimulus or prompt for a multiple-choice question options (alternatives) different responses from which a test-taker can choose in an item key the correct response to a multiple-choice question distractors responses in multiple-choice item used to divert or distract the test-taker from the correct response item facility (IF) a statistic used to examine the percentage of students who correctly answered a given test item item discrimination (ID) a statistic used to differentiate between high- and low-ability test-takers item response theory a measurement approach that uses complex statistical modeling of test performance data to make generalizations about item characteristics equated forms forms that are reliable across tests so that a score on a subsequent form of a tests has the same validity and interpretability as the original test distractor efficiency the effectiveness of the distractor to attract a test-taker away from the correct response form-focused assessment assessment that focuses on the organizational components (e.g., grammar, vocabulary) of a language triangulation (of assessments) using two (or more) performances on an assessment, or two or more different assessments, to make a decision about a person's ability interactive (skills) combining the use of more than one skill (reading, writing, speaking, and listening) in using language microskills detailed specific linguistic competencies that involve processing up to and including the sentence-level (phonology, morphology, grammar, lexicon) macroskills linguistic competencies that involve language competence beyond the sentence level (discourse, pragmatics, rhetorical devices) selective response test items that require the test-taker to select rather than produce a response such as true/false or multiple-choice listening cloze (or cloze dictation/ partial dictation) a cloze test that requires the test taker to listen to a cloze passage while reading it exact word scoring (cloze) a scoring method that is limited to accepting the same word found in the original text appropriate-word scoring (cloze) a scoring method that accepts a suitable, grammatically and rhetorically acceptable word that fits the blank space in the original text information transfer a process in which information processed f rom one skill is used to perform another skills (listen to phone number - then write it down) picture-cued items test questions in which a visual stimulus serves to prompt a response or in which the test-taker chooses, among visuals, a response that correctly matches a spoken or written prompt sentence repetition the task of orally reproducing part of a sentence or a complete sentences that has been modeled by a teacher or test administrator limited response tasks a task that requires only a few words or a phrase as the answer mechanical tasks a task that determines in advance what the test-taker will produce (e.g. reading aloud or sentence repetition) controlled response task a task that limits the amount of language that is produced; e.g., in a controlled writing task, a number of grammatical or lexical constraints that apply schemata background knowledge; cultural or world knowledge process attending to the procedures (steps, strategies, tools, abilities) used to comprehend or produce language product attending to the end result of a linguistic action (e.g. in writing, the "final" paper, versus the various steps involved in composing the paper) genre type or category (e.g., academic writing, short story, pleasure reading) of a text fixed-ratio deletion (cloze) every nth word is deleted in a text while reading it rational deletion (cloze) words are delete in a text on a rational basis (e.g., prepositions, sentence connectors) to assess specified grammatical or rhetorical categories C-test a text in which the second half of every other word is eliminated and the test-taker must provide the whole word cloze-elide procedure unnecessary words are inserted into a text and the test-taker must detect and eliminate those words dicto-comp a variant of dictation whereby test-takers listen to a relatively long text (e.g., a paragraph of several sentences or more) and try to internalize the content, some phrases, and/or key lexical items and then use them to recreate the text holistic scoring an approach that uses a single general scale to give a global rating for a test-taker's language production primary-trait scoring in a writing test, a single score indicating the effectiveness of the text in achieving its primary goal analytic scoring an approach that separately rates a number of predetermined aspects (e.g., grammar, content, organization) of a test-taker's language production (e.g.), writing) stability reliability same test to the same (or similar) students on two different occasions, the test should yield similar results. alternative form reliability similar/consistent results from multiple test forms consistency reliability one test administration, reflects how well the items are doing their job, that is tapping into the same construct : items appropriately difficult, good/poor distractors, good/poor rubrics, too many or too few items, etc Download 0.94 Mb. 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