One of the realities of educational practice in the late 20th
century is the increasing role of assessment, especially of
children's oral and written language. While there are many issues
and problems surrounding this assessment, one problem that needs to
be addressed is the lack of alternative ways of assessing
children's language and literacy for K-12 practitioners. There are
many ways to approach the assessment of language and literacy. How
one approaches the assessment of oral and written language depends,
in large part, on how language is defined and on what purposes
language is viewed as serving. In this book, alternative ways of
assessing language are based on three different perspectives
defining language and its uses: anthropological,
socio-psycholinguistic, and literary. Although applying these
perspectives to language is not new, only recently have educators
and others taken seriously the need for assessment of language to
be consistent with the perspectives of language underlying
classroom instruction. Simply put, as language education (including
reading, writing, and oral language) becomes increasingly based
upon anthropological, socio-psycholinguistic, and literary
principles, the assessment of language and literacy must also be
based upon such principles. This book discusses and illustrates how
to reconceptualize assessment in terms of the alternative
perspectives outlined here.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!