Teaching English as a Foreign Language, Second Edition
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Assessment and Examinations
162 which seems to have been found is a teacher’s rating. An experienced teacher who knows his class well can rank pupils in order of merit with considerable reliability and accuracy. Thus tests whose results correlate well with teacher ratings can be regarded as empirically valid, and the correspondence between the two measures can be expressed as a coefficient of validity. Testing specialists like such coefficients to have a value higher than 0.7—perfect correlation would give a coefficient of 1.0. It is clear of course that empirical validity is unlikely to be achieved unless a test is constructed in accordance with some respectable theory of language. It is also unlikely to be achieved unless the test adequately samples the knowledge and activities which are entailed by showing that one knows a language. However, a theoretical base and adequate sampling do not guarantee empirical validity—to gain that, the test must be set against some external criterion. There is one final kind of validity which is sometimes discussed in the literature on assessment. This is ‘face validity’. This is a matter of how the test appears to the pupils being tested, to teachers, administrators and so on. If the form or content of a test appears foolish or irrelevant or inconsequential, then users of the test will be suspicious of it; those in authority will be unlikely to adopt it, pupils may be poorly motivated by it. Thus test makers must ensure that a test not only tests what it is supposed to test, reliably and accurately but that it looks as though that is what it does. A final characteristic of a good language test is practicability. By this is meant the extent to which the test is readily usable by teachers with limited time and resources at their disposal. Such factors as the cost of the test booklets, the amount of time and manpower needed to prepare, administer, invigilate, mark and interpret the test, the requirements for special equipment and so on must all be taken into account. For example a standardised test which employs re-usable test booklets with separate answer sheets is likely to be much cheaper to run than one which uses consumable test booklets. Tests which take relatively little time to work and process are likely to be preferred to those which take a lot of time, those which can be given to many pupils simultaneously are usually more practicable than Assessment and Examinations 163 those which require individual administration. Simple paper and pencil tests may well be preferred to those which require elaborate audio- or video-recording equipment. Up-to-date tests whose cultural content is unexceptional are evidently better than those which are out of date and contain culturally inappropriate or objectionable material, those with clear instruction manuals are better than those with obscure manuals, and so on. The test maker needs to bear all such factors in mind, but he should also bear in mind that the testing of some kinds of activity relevant to some dimensions of ‘knowing a language’ may require the use of elaborate equipment or individualised methods and a proper balance must be struck. In the classroom the teacher finds himself faced with having to assess the progress of his pupils, to judge their suitability for one class or another and so on. He must decide out of the whole complex of considerations which has been outlined above what kind of assessment he wishes to make, of what aspects of his pupils learning, with what kind of reliability and what kind of validity. Once those decisions are made he can go ahead with devising his instrument for making the assessment. For help with that he will find J.B. Heaton’s Writing English Language Tests a useful book along with the book by Lado mentioned earlier, and that by Rebecca Valette listed below. The last matters to which it would seem appropriate to give some attention here concern standardised English language tests, and the public examinations systems. A number of standardised tests exist. Among these the Davis test has been widely used. More recently Elizabeth Ingram has published English Language Battery but the American tests in this area seem to be more readily available. Among the best known of these are Robert Lado’s English Language Test for Foreign Students which developed into the Michigan Test of English Language Proficiency and the TOEFL, Educational Testing Service, Test of English as a Foreign Language. Further information and discussion of such tests will be found in The Seventh Mental Measurements Yearbook, ed. O.Bures. |
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