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To meet the needs of adult language learners in modern
communicative contexts, pluralistic approaches to language
education such as Pluricultural Language Education (PLE) are
emerging. These approaches aim to recognise and build on
individuals' full linguistic and cultural repertoires and
trajectories throughout the language learning process. Based on the
CEFR's perspectives on pluriculturalism, autonomous learning and
the action-oriented approach to language use, this volume's
interpretation of PLE involves enhancing language learners'
knowledge and awareness of diversity and individual perspective in
communicative situations, and developing mediation and autonomous
learning skills.This volume mobilises teachers, managers,
curriculum and materials developers, and other stakeholders to
incorporate CEFR-informed pluriculturalism into language education
practice in a flexible, stepwise and contextualised manner.
This book provides the theoretical bases and empirical evidence for
establishing an integrated reading-into-writing construct for
English Profile at upper levels of proficiency. The study
investigates both the contextual features of a range of real life
academic writing tasks and reading-into-writing test tasks, and the
cognitive processes required to complete the integrated task type
successfully. Since its publication, the CEFR has become
influential in building a shared understanding of performance
levels for foreign language learners but mainly for individual
macro skills. A considerable gap remains in the understanding of
the integrated reading-into-writing skills, which are so important
to the kinds of academic and professional written language use
involved at the higher levels of the CEFR.
This volume brings together a collection of chapters outlining the
principles and processes of action research and providing case
studies of practitioner action research completed by teachers in
the ELICOS (English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas
Students) sector in Australia. The Action Research in ELICOS
programme in which the teachers participated was an innovative
collaboration between English Australia, the professional body for
ELICOS, and Cambridge English Language Assessment commencing in
2010 and continuing to the present. An introductory chapter
describes the initiation of the programme and the professional
model adopted to support and facilitate the teachers' research,
while a concluding chapter considers the impact of the programme on
the teachers and on the ELICOS sector more generally. Case studies
by the teachers present the action research processes they
undertook to research receptive and productive skills and
assessment of these skills in their classrooms.
This volume takes a framework for validating tests that was
developed in language testing, and applies it to an admissions test
used for biomedical courses. The framework is used to consider
validity in the BioMedical Admissions Test (BMAT). Each chapter
focuses on a different aspect of validity and also presents
research that has been conducted with the test. By addressing all
of the validity aspects identified as important by language
testers, this volume presents a comprehensive evaluation of BMAT's
validity. The processes of evaluation used in the book also promote
a cross-disciplinary approach to assessment research, by
demonstrating how effectively language testing frameworks can be
used in different educational contexts. The authors of the chapters
include Cambridge Assessment staff and medical education experts,
from a wide range of subject backgrounds. Psychologists,
clinicians, linguists and assessment experts have all contributed
to the volume, making it an example of multidisciplinary
collaboration.
This volume outlines the general principles of Learning Oriented
Assessment (LOA), placing it in the context of European language
learning policy. The authors pose three key questions central to
LOA: 'What is learning?' , 'What is to be learned?' and 'What is to
be assessed?'. It focuses on the use of evidence, and how it can be
collected and used to feed back into learning, overviews
large-scale assessment as practised by Cambridge English and
learning-oriented classroom assessment practices, and concludes
with a look at implementing LOA in practice. With fresh insights
into the role of assessment in supporting learning, this volume
will be of considerable interest to assessment practitioners,
teachers and academics, educational policy-makers and examination
board personnel.
This volume provides a theoretical and practical discussion of
mixed methods research and its application in language assessment.
The authors present a discussion of the role of mixed methods
design in language assessment, offering practical illustrations of
different mixed method designs and decisions to be made in
presenting mixed methods research. The volume also includes case
studies from language assessment on the practical application of
mixed methods.
This volume introduces a new concept, 'criterial features', for the
learning, teaching and testing of English as a second language. The
work is based on research conducted within the English Profile
Programme at Cambridge University, using the Cambridge Learner
Corpus. The authors address the extent to which learners know the
grammar, lexicon and usage conventions of English at each level of
the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR). These levels are
currently illustrated in functional terms with 'Can Do' statements.
Greater specificity and precision can be achieved by using the
tagged and parsed corpus, which enables researchers to identify
criterial features of the CEFR levels, i.e. properties that are
characteristic and indicative of L2 proficiency at each level. In
practical terms, once criterial features have been identified, the
grammatical and lexical properties of English can be presented to
learners more efficiently and in ways that are appropriate to their
levels.
This volume contains a selection of research papers that were
presented at the 15th Annual Language Testing Research Colloquium
(LTRC) on the themes of performance testing, and on aspects of
communication in relation to cognition and assessment. This edited
collection includes contributions reporting research into the
testing of speaking and writing, especially in relation to raters,
tasks and assessment criteria, contributions exploring the
application of various statistical methods in langauge test
validation and contributions addressing the issues relating to
langauge testing in specific contexts with particular candidate
groups. This volume will be of relevance to language testing
specialists concerned with the design, development, delivery and
validation of performance tests, as well as to academic researchers
and graduate students interested in the complex relationship
between cognition and assessment.
This volume describes differing approaches to understanding
academic reading ability that have emerged in recent decades and
goes on to develop an empirically-grounded framework for validating
tests of this skill. The framework is then applied to the IELTS
Academic Reading module to investigate a number of different
validity perspectives that reflect the socio-cognitive nature of
any assessment event. The authors demonstrate how a systematic
understanding and application of the framework and its components
can help test developers to operationalise their tests so as to
fulfill the validity requirements for an academic reading test.
This volume brings together 11 TIRF-related research papers on the
development and application of English language teaching and
learning strategies on English language assessment. The papers are
all written by recipients of The International Research Foundation
for English language teaching (TIRF) Doctoral Dissertation Grants
(DDGs). TIRF is a nonprofit organisation whose mission is to
generate new knowledge about English language teaching and
learning, applying research findings to practical language problems
by working collaboratively with teachers, researchers, authors,
publishers, philanthropic foundations, government agencies, and
major companies such as Cambridge English Language Assessment. The
aim of the publication is to support TIRF's mission to: (1) to
implement a research and development programme that will generate
new knowledge and inform and improve the quality of English
language teaching and learning; (2) to promote the application of
research on practical language problems; (3) to collect, organise,
and disseminate information and research on the teaching and
learning of English; and (4) to influence the formation and
implementation of appropriate language education policies,
recognising the importance of local/transnational languages and
cultures worldwide, and of English as an international language.
The volume reflects on how learners' L2 development between the
ages of 6 and 16 can be coherently described and their L2
assessment defined in terms of socio-cognitive validity. There is
particular focus on the theoretical foundations, language
competence model, development and validation framework, and
evaluation and review processes to provide evidence for the
validity of the Cambridge English family of assessments for
children and teenagers.Academics, assessment professionals and
postgraduate researchers of L2 development in children and
teenagers will find great value in the volume's theoretical
insight, while policy-makers and teachers will gain rigorous
practical advice for the young language learner's classroom and
assessment.
Written by a selection of his friends and collaborators, this
multi-authored volume is intended as a tribute to the academic
achievements of Professor Cyril J Weir. Each contribution will
refer to a particular aspect of Cyril's legacy to the field of
language testing and assessment, both nationally and
internationally, in order to discuss and reflect upon some of the
specific lessons we have learned from him for our profession.
This book introduces the theoretical and empirical bases for the
definition of language learning level in functional 'Can Do' terms
for the English Profile Programme, setting out the ambitions of the
Programme and presenting emerging findings. The English Profile
Programme is an elaboration of the performance level descriptions
of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR)
that is concerned specifically with the English language. The CEFR
has become influential in building a shared understanding of
performance levels for foreign language learners. However, there is
a considerable gap between the broad descriptions of levels
provided, which covers a range of languages and learning contexts,
and the level of detail required for applications such as syllabus
or test design, which this volume addresses. With its combination
of theoretical insights and practical advice, this is a useful work
for academics, policy-makers, curriculum designers, textbook
writers, postgraduate students and examination board staff.
Topics are often used as a key speech elicitation method in
performance-based assessments of spoken language and yet, the
validity and fairness issues surrounding topics are surprisingly
under-researched. Are different topics 'equivalent' or 'parallel'?
Can some topics bias against or favour individuals or groups of
individuals? Does background knowledge of topics have an impact on
performance? Might the content of test taker speech affect their
scores - and perhaps more importantly, should it? This monograph
draws on original data as well as insights from empirical and
theoretical research to address these questions. Grounded in the
real-world assessment context of IELTS, this volume explores issues
related to topic validity against the backdrop of one of the
world's most high stakes language tests.
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