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INNOVATIVE PEDAGOGICAL TECHNOLOGIES
Indirect assessment tries to measure language through means
that are not directly productive. For example, indirect assessment 153 might ask students to recognize the correct verb form, but not actually measure their ability to produce it or use it. One of the types of assessment is alternative assessment as innovation in FLT methodology, so it is a useful means of gathering evidence regarding how learners approach, process, and complete real life tasks in the target language. Alternative assessment uses a wide variety of formats, such as checklists, journals, reading logs, portfolios, and video of role-plays, audio-tapes of discussion, self- evaluation questionnaire, teacher observations, and anecdotal records to assess the performance of students. These formats show what the students can actually do rather than what they are able to recall. Alternative assessment reflects the curriculum being taught and provides information on the strengths and weaknesses of each student. Furthermore, it provides multiple ways of determining the progress of students and can be more culturally sensitive and free of the linguistic and cultural biases inherent in traditional testing. Alternative assessment is closely intertwined with classroom instruction. It does not require a separate block of time to be administered because it is based on day-today instructional activities. Finally, alternative assessment provides valid and reliable documentation of students’ achievement and progress. 3. Criteria of assessment and grading As we pointed out before by the evaluation we understand the analysis and use of data by faculty judgments about students’ performance. Evaluation includes the determination of a grade or a decision regarding pass/fail for an individual assignment or for a course”. For example, you may assign a research paper in your course that is designed to determine. Now well students can search and summarize a body of literature. Using a rubric, you “evaluate” the papers and assign grades that reflect the level at which an individual student performs the assignment. In this case, you are comparing the work to a standard in order to determine a grade. You can use the same rubric to determine what aspects of the assignment students, as a group, do well with and what aspects they are less proficient at. When you use this information to change your 154 teaching methods, for example, in attempt to improve students’ performance on this paper the next time you teach the course, you are doing “assessment”. It is important that learners know the criteria upon which their performance is being judged – whether this be communicative success, appropriate to context, accuracy in formal terms, or a combination of all these. Criteria can be worked out by a teacher for assessment of language subskills and skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). The feedback provided by a teacher should aim to be relevant to the type of tasks in which learners are engaged. On the whole, we give feedback on oral work through speech, on written work through writing; and although there are occasional situations where we might do it the other way round (for example, discuss an essay with a student in a one-to-one tutorial, or write a letter providing feedback. There are some situations where we might prefer not to correct a learner's mistake: in fluency work, for example, when the learner is in mid-speech, and to correct would disturb and discourage more than help. But there are other situations when correction is likely to be helpful (See: Ur, 1991: 246.). The teacher needs a clear idea of what they are measuring in the performance, and students should be given feedback that they can understand. The assessment directed to monitor students’ progress under up- to-date approaches such as a learner-centered and communicative should follow the given below requirements: - to monitor whether students are learning what they are being taught, and are able to perform communicative activities successfully at a level appropriate to their aspirations, achievements, and apparent potential; - to monitor the outcomes of students’ own self or group- directed assignments; - to monitor students’ language development; - to monitor the process by which a learner is learning. Under suggested conditions the appropriate decisions should be made as how best to proceed an assessment. The appropriate decisions we find in the book by John Clark (1987) which are topical nowadays. 155 If fossilization appears to be occurring, emphasis may need to be placed on further communicative data and on a more deliberate focus on form. If deliberate learning appears to be proceeding, but little fluency is occurring, an increase in communicative experience may be required. Students can be encouraged to monitor each other’s performances. They can learn to draw attention to what they think monitoring capacity, and allows them to learn from each other. The ultimate aim of peer monitoring, however, must encourage an appropriate level of self-monitoring. Modern requirements to the levels of language proficiency according to the State Educational Standard (2013) demands of modern approach to the assessment which can cover not only the cognitive aspect of learning, but also invite learners to express how they feel about what they have been doing. At the result of reflecting their learning experience, they are expected to learn how to go about their learning tasks better, i.e. to learn how to learn. So, there is an emphasis on peer-evaluation and self-evaluation. Under the innovations in assessment a teacher must know terms related to assessment and distinctions between types, forms and criteria of assessment (See the Table 14). Download 2.75 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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