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This volume reconsiders the problem of context in language testing
and other modes of assessment from the perspective of
transdisciplinarity. Transdisciplinary assessment research brings
together collaborators who draw on the strengths of their differing
backgrounds and expertise in order to address high-stakes complex
socially-relevant problems. Traditional treatments of context in
language assessment research have generally been informed by
individualist cognitive theories within measurement and
psychometrics. The additive potential of alternative social
theories, including theories of genre, situated learning,
distributed cognition, and intercultural communication, has largely
been overlooked. In this book, the benefits of socio-theoretical
reconsiderations of context are discussed and further exemplified
in transdisciplinary research studies that investigate the use of
assessment in classroom and workplace settings. The book offers a
renewed view of context in arguments for the validity of assessment
practices, and will be of interest to assessment researchers,
practitioners, and students in applied linguistics, education,
educational psychology, language testing, and other related
disciplines and fields.
This book makes a unique contribution to classroom assessment
literature, linking teacher-friendly examples to scholarly work and
current research in the field, and providing comprehensive,
hands-on information on core concepts in accessible terms. Examples
of real activities and questions for reflection and discussion aim
to enrich understanding.
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