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Understanding and Setting New Scores

Learn about the TOEFL score report and how to set scores for your program. Explore the importance of individual skill scores and how they can better reflect student abilities. Gain insights from score comparisons, rubrics, and percentile data.

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Understanding and Setting New Scores

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  1. Understanding and Setting New Scores

  2. iBT TOEFL Scores The score report universities receive will contain: • Four skill scores • Reading 0 - 30 • Listening 0 - 30 • Speaking 0 - 30 • Writing 0 - 30 • A total score: 0 – 120

  3. Setting New TOEFL Scores An opportunity to think more about English language needs & requirements • Are all skills equally important for success in your program? If not, do your score requirements reflect this? • Students with the same total score can have different abilities • Consider using: • skill scores instead of total scores • skill scores and total scores

  4. Understanding & Setting New Scores • Rubrics for Writing & Speaking • Speaking and Writing samples • Score comparisons • Percentile data • English language competency descriptors • Results from standard setting studies • Standard setting on your own campus

  5. Score Comparisons: iBT, CBT, PBT • Based on a field test of 3,000 test takers in 30 countries • Approx 80% of TOEFL volume comes from these 30 countries • Test takers took TOEFL iBT and TOEFL CBT (computer-based) • Score comparisons for CBT and PBT (paper-based test) established in 1998

  6. Using Score Comparisons: iBT, CBT, PBT Score-to-score and range-to-range comparisons for: • Reading • Listening • Writing • Reading, Listening & Writing only total • Total score (all four skills)

  7. Setting Speaking Scores No Speaking section on TOEFL CBT Standard setting panel of ITA experts Professional judgment, not statistically determined • Minimally acceptable level of speaking for lowest level of contact with undergraduates: 23 • TSE 50 score equivalent: 26

  8. Using Score Comparisons: iBT, CBT, PBT Score comparisons can be useful for understanding relationships, but differences in the tests can make it difficult to establish exact comparisons.

  9. Using Score Comparisons: iBT, CBT, PBT Remember: • If you’re comparing total scores, CBT and PBT TOEFL do not measure Speaking, but iBT does. • Using skill scores or skill scores and a total score will give you more information about your applicant. Use the whole profile. • ETS encourages you not to set a rigid cut score

  10. Percentile Data • Based on field test • Should be used with caution • Sample size • Motivation & performance • Unfamiliarity with the test, communicative competence & integrated tasks • Addition of Speaking • Participants had lower ability level than general TOEFL population New data from operational test to be published after first year

  11. English Language Competency Descriptors • Based on 2,300 students who took the new iBT test and responded to questions about their English language ability in each skill • Competency descriptors tell us what a student can do, and has difficulty with, in English

  12. Results from ETS Standard Setting Studies • Panels at 5 universities recommended scores based on seeing the new test and reviewing examinee performance. • Results to be published after decision makers discuss recommendations and set final scores. Final scores to be posted on our Web site. • Schools similar to those in the study may wish to adopt similar scores.

  13. Panel Recommendations –NOT FINAL SCORES

  14. Standard Setting at Your Institution • The best way to ensure your language requirements match your institution • Over 2 days, a panel of college or university faculty and staff work view the test and student responses to it. • The panel recommends the level of English just high enough to cope with studies at your school.

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