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Presentation agenda. Issues in assessing children's language learningLexical distinctionsSocial
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1. Assessing Young Learners Christine Coombe
Dubai Mens College
2. Presentation agenda Issues in assessing childrens language learning
Lexical distinctions
Social & classroom realities of YL assessment
Principles for assessing childrens language learning
Current views about YL assessment
How YLs learn
Techniques for assessing YLs
Questions and discussion
3. Issues in assessing childrens language learning The following make assessing YLs different from assessment practices in other F/SL situations
Age: childrens motor, linguistic, social and conceptual development must be taken into account
Content of language learning: a focus on oral skills, vocabulary development and language use at discourse level
4. Issues in assessing childrens language learning Methods of teaching: interactive use of games, songs, rhymes, stories
Aims: programs for YLs often cite social and cross cultural aims as well as language learning ones
Learning theories: learning centered approach, learning through social interaction (Cameron, 2001)
A survey of the sparse info that is available on YL assessment suggests that assessment practices to not take these factors into account (Rea-Dickins, 2000)
5. Lexical distinctions A helpful distinction between testing and assessment when teaching children English is made by Vale & Feunteun (1995)
Testing: a means of checking that learning has taken place with respect to specified teaching context/input, often by a particular task.
Results are usually concrete and can be expressed quantitatively as a mark or %
6. Lexical distinctions cont.
Assessment: an attempt to analyze the learning that a child has achieved over a period of time as a result of classroom teaching/learning.
Not based on a particular task nor expressed as a mark.
A subjective (teacher) opinion of the achievement of a child in terms of attitude, participation, socialization and general cognitive/physical development
Progress measured against individual starting points & abilities rather than compared against skills/abilities of others as in traditional testing
7. Social realities of assessment Political, commercial & cultural dynamics underlie conflicts around the role of assessment in language teaching/learning
It is reasonable to require that assessment serve teaching
by providing feedback on pupils learning, this will make the next teaching event more effective
Known as washback
8. Social realities of assessment In theory, teaching & learning need to dictate the form and timing of assessment
In practice, the scenario is quite different
assessment often drives teaching
forces Ts to teach what is being assessed
an example of negative washback
This is a reality not only with YLs but other learners as well
9. Classroom realities
Survey conducted by Rea-Dickins and Rixon (1999) asked 120 Ts and teacher trainers in Europe about their assessment practices
Vast majority (92%) of the Ts do assess children with the stated purpose of helping their teaching (87%).
Most of this assessment was prepared by Ts who were responsible for marking and record keeping
10. Classroom realities When investigating what was being assessed
mismatch between curricular aims, pedagogy and test content found to exist
the most frequently used method was the paper and pencil test
testing single items of vocabulary and grammar through one sentence contexts
This contrasted vividly with how children were being taught
tests found to neglect speaking
what was being assessed was what was easy to assess
11. Principles for assessing childrens language learning Assessment should be seen from a learning centered perspective
A Vygotskyan perspective on learning emphasizes that learning occurs in social contexts and through interaction with helpful adults or other children
Vygotsky (1962) insisted that we do not get a true assessment of a childs ability by measuring what he/she can do alone and without help
what a child can do with helpful others both predicts the next stage in learning and gives a better assessment of learning
12. Principles for assessing childrens language learning Assessment should support learning/ teaching
If learning is our central focus, assessment should contribute to the learning process
for both the individual child and for the class
Known as instructionally-embedded assessment
13. More principles
Ts need clear understanding of language learning processes and of socio-cultural context in which they operate
With this knowledge, they can predict the impact of assessment on their teaching and plan accordingly
Assessment should not disrupt learning
Assessments often criticized because they replace instructional time
Ts who use daily teaching events to collect data are not taking away valuable teaching time
The key is understanding what will be the focus of assessment data collection and which tools will produce the best or most useful information
Children need to be assessed in an anxiety-reduced or anxiety-free environment
This can be achieved only if a child perceives assessment as an integral component of the teaching/learning process
14. More principles Assessment is more than testing
It is not necessary to test children to know how well they are doing
there are other more supportive ways to assess learning that go beyond testing
alternative assessment techniques like observation, portfolios and self-assessment (OMalley & Valdez Pierce, 1996)
15. More principles Assessment should be congruent with learning
Assessment should fit comfortably with childrens learning experience
Assessment should be interactional rather than an isolated, solo experience
Children and parents should understand assessment issues
Transparency must exist
Parents often feel that they way they were assessed is the best way.
16. More principles Employ multiples measures of assessment
No one assessment tool can provide all the information that Ts need to plan instruction, make instructional decisions or determine success or mastery of Ss
Use a variety of assessment tools
The composite view provided by these multiple measures allows Ts to make generalizations about student learning
17. Current views about YL assessment Standardized tests are problematic for children
Growth is most uneven and idiosyncratic
Skills needed for success are at their most fluid
Failure in these years can be devastating
Standardized tests put tremendous pressure on YLs
No Child Left Behind Act
Pressure can inhibit thinking (Jensen, 1998) and decrease the accuracy of assessment
YLs are notoriously poor test takers
..the younger the child being evaluated, assessed, or tested, the more errors are made and the greater the risk of assigning false labels to them (Katz, 1997).
18. How YLs learn Traditional types of assessment are often insufficiently sensitive to the ways YLs demonstrate their competencies
also interrupt the learning process in active, engaging classrooms.
Research shows that children in preschool years and early primary grades learn best through
active, engaged, meaningful experiences
19. How YLs learn
Through these experiences YLs construct their own knowledge by interacting with their environment and others
work of Piaget has demonstrated importance of sensory experiences and concrete learning activities
importance of direct, first-hand interactive experience confirmed by National Association for the Education of Young Children
these experiences are difficult to assess
20. Techniques for assessing YLs Observation
One of the most useful assessment techniques
does not disturb the child and allows him/her to be assessed in the process of ordinary classroom activities
Ts continually observe and utilize the observe-notice-adjust teaching process
Not realistic to observe every child on every occasion
better to focus on 6/7 during one lesson
results in better quality information being collected
Most common way of recording observations of childrens performance is through a checklist
21. More techniques Self-assessment
A child who learns to assess his/her own work moves from being other-regulated to self-regulated or autonomous
commonly recognized that autonomous learners will be at an advantage in continuing to learn and adjust throughout their lives
How feasible is it with groups of five-year olds?
we tend to underestimate the potential for self-assessment in our children
see them as empty vessels in need of being filled with knowledge
wild in need of taming
22. More techniques Portfolio assessment
A collection of work that reveal both the capability and the progress of a learner
Requires close cooperation between T and S in selecting the contents
What to include: samples of writing, lists of books read, audio taped or videotaped recordings, conference or observation notes, artwork, self assessment checklists like K-W-L charts, samples of tests and quizzes
23. More techniques K-W-L Charts
what they know, what they wonder or want to know and what they have learned
Learning logs
A record of Ss experiences with English outside the classroom including
the when and where of language use
why certain experiences were successful and why others were not
Dialog journals
Ongoing written dialog between teacher and student
24. More techniques Interactive writing charts
Observation charts that document the presence or absence of a variety of different writing conventions and/or abilities
Running records
A simple checklist used during reading aloud activities
Ts code the presence or absence of a word or a miscue
A mechanism exists for self correcting (Frey & Fisher, 2003)
25. A final word on standardized tests Cambridge ESOL created the Cambridge Young Learners English Tests in 1993
A series of tests for children of all nationalities aged 7 to 12 who are learning EFL whatever their L1
Designed with a high interest level for test takers and on a pass/fail basis
Four-skills tests available at 3 levels: Starters, Movers and Flyers (equivalent to the KET)
All sections graded on a scale from 1 to 5 (represented as shields)
http://www.cambridge-efl.org.uk
26. Conclusion Documenting the growth of YLs presents many challenges
Assessment practices not only determine childrens futures and how their time is spent, but also carry messages for children about what parents and Ts consider important in language learning and in life
Research shows that children live up to the expectations of their Ts whether they are high or low
expectations are perhaps more clearly revealed through assessment practices than anywhere else
27. Conclusion
For YLs, what matters is a solid base
in spoken language
confidence and enjoyment in working with the spoken and written forms of the language
a good foundation in learning skills
We should be looking for assessment practices that will reinforce the value of these skills to learners and to their parents
28. Presenter contact Christine Coombe
Dubai Mens College, HCT
PO Box 15825
Dubai, UAE
christine.coombe@hct.ac.ae or christinecoombe@hotmail.com
http://taesig.com or http://ctelt.com