📚 Assessment in language teaching is the process of measuring learners' proficiency or achievement.
🔍 Assessment uses various techniques and strategies to determine if learners have achieved their objectives.
📝 Assessment can be formal or informal, and formative or summative, depending on the purpose and timing.
Traditional assessment methods involve one-shot standardized tests and focus on right and wrong answers.
Alternative assessment is continuous, allowing for creativity and open-ended responses.
Peer assessment is a valuable method for improving writing skills through feedback and editing.
💡 Writing peer assessment improves collaboration and interpersonal skills.
💭 Self-assessment encourages reflective thinking, self-regulation, and autonomy.
📚 Performance-based assessment measures language abilities in real-world contexts.
💡 A practical assessment should be easy to administer and score.
🎯 Reliability is achieved through students' consistency, raters' consistency, administration conditions, and test clarity.
✅ Assessment validity is ensured by aligning test content with course content and using a theoretical framework.
⚡️ Consequential validity is the impact of a test on learners and their performance.
👍 Face validity refers to how students perceive the fairness and usefulness of a test.
🔍 Authenticity is important in assessments, with tasks and language resembling real-world situations.
🔄 Positive washback encourages learning and provides feedback, while negative washback hinders learning and causes stress.
Assessment in language teaching involves testing a person's ability, knowledge, or skill in a certain domain through the use of tests.
There are different types of tests used for different purposes in language teaching, including aptitude tests, placement tests, diagnostic tests, and proficiency tests.
Each type of test serves a specific function, such as predicting a learner's success, determining the appropriate level for a new student, identifying learners' weaknesses and strengths, and measuring overall language competence.
Proficiency tests are summative and do not provide formative feedback.
Achievement tests measure learners' progress and can be formative with feedback sessions.
Assessment techniques include selected response, constructed response, and personal response activities.