Language Assessment What it measures and how Jill Kerper Mora, Ed.D.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Assessment types and activities
Advertisements

Second Language Acquisition
Interlanguage IL LEC. 9.
CODE/ CODE SWITCHING.
Second Language Acquisition
3 levels: Foundation, Standard, Advanced Language B Spanish Criteria.
California English Language Development Test Review of the Test Composition.
SCHOOL-BASED ORAL ENGLISH ASSESSMENT (PLBS)
Mapping our language programmes Vicky Wright Centre for Language Study
Categories 4321 I. Listening This will evaluate by following the criteria below. Comprehension Correct and complete the exercises and assignment; a student.
Principles for teaching speaking 1.Give students practice with both fluency and accuracy 2.Provide opportunities for students to interact by using pair.
Introduction to Linguistics and Basic Terms
Data-Driven South Asian Language Learning SALRC Pedagogy Workshop June 8, 2005 J. Scott Payne Penn State University
1. Introduction Which rules to describe Form and Function Type versus Token 2 Discourse Grammar Appreciation.
Correlation of former to new levels NEW ENGLISH LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY LEVELS.
Continuing dominance of “language of instruction” debate.
Teaching Oral Communication Skills
The 6 Principles of Second language learning (DEECD,2000) Beliefs and Understandings Assessment Principle Responsibility Principle Immersion Principle.
Stages of Second Language Acquisition
National Curriculum Key Stage 2
14: THE TEACHING OF GRAMMAR  Should grammar be taught?  When? How? Why?  Grammar teaching: Any strategies conducted in order to help learners understand,
ESL Phases & ESL Scale Curriculum Corporation 1994.
Creating Assessments with English Language Learners in Mind In this module we will examine: Who are English Language Learners (ELL) and how are they identified?
1 DEVELOPING ASSESSMENT TOOLS FOR ESL Liz Davidson & Nadia Casarotto CMM General Studies and Further Education.
Proficiency Approach in Teaching Chinese
The Grammar – Translation Method
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
Communicative Language Teaching Vocabulary
Chapter 6 ~~~~~ Oral And English Language Learner/Bilingual Assessment.
Second Language Acquisition
10/3/2015ESL Conference: Kananaskis 1 It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got that Swing.
Elise Hardin & Erika Kroskos
Teaching language means teaching the components of language Content (also called semantics) refers to the ideas or concepts being communicated. Form refers.
CHAPTER 3: Language Development Among Children of Linguistic Diversity Modified by Dr. Laura Taddei Language Development in Early Childhood Education Fourth.
UNIT 5 AN ADDITIVE APPROACH TO PLANNING IN PLURILINGUAL CLASSROOMS.
Natural Stages of Language Development: Teaching Learners through Principles of Language Acquisition TLPI Spring 2007 Prepared by Virginia Shannon.
LANGUAGE TRANSFER SRI SURYANTI WORD ORDER STUDIES OF TRANSFER ODLIN (1989;1990) UNIVERSAL POSITION WHAT EXTENT WORD ORDER IN INTERLANGUAGE IS.
2 nd week Presentation of Applied Linguistics Prepared By: Chia Farhad Muahmad Barozhi Narmin Afifa Pishtiwan.
What is a method? More than three decades ago . Edward Anthony (1963) gave us a definition that has quite admirably withstood the test of time. His concept.
Second Language Acquisition
Chapter Eleven Individuals With Speech and Language Impairments.
TEFL METHODOLOGY I COMMUNICATIVE LANGUAGE TEACHING.
This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance or display, including.
FIDELITY IN TRANSLATION AND INTERPRETATION PLAN 1.Fidelity as a phenomenon in translation 2.Verbalizing a simple idea 3.Principles of fidelity 3.1. Primary.
The Audio-Lingual Method
Pragmatics and Text Analysis Chapter 6.  concerned with the how meaning is communicated by the speaker (writer) and interpreted by the listener (reader)
 explain expected stages and patterns of language development as related to first and second language acquisition (critical period hypothesis– Proficiency.
Unit 2 The Nature of Learner Language 1. Errors and errors analysis 2. Developmental patterns 3. Variability in learner language.
Second-language acquisition. Acquisition is the subconscious assimilation of the language without any awareness of knowing rules. Learning is a conscious.
Direct Method.
Optional Lecture: Competency in English for the Moroccan Context Dr. Douglas Fleming Faculty of Education.
Introduction to Language Teaching The Grammar-Translation Method.
Goal :Communicative Competence
COURSE AND SYLLABUS DESIGN
UIC SpEd 576: Internship in Assessment Cindy Collado.
Interactive Lecture 2: Discourse, Competency, Proficiency and the Implications for Methodology Dr. Douglas Fleming Faculty of Education.
T H E D I R E C T M E T H O D DM. Background DM An outcome of a reaction against the Grammar- Translation Method. It was based on the assumption that.
THE MEASUREMENT OF BILINGUALISM
Q: What is your definition of “knowing a word”?. Knowing a word means… Knowing how often it occurs, the company it keeps, its appropriateness in different.
Second Language Acquisition To Think About: Think about a baby acquiring his/her first language. Think about a person acquiring a second language. What.
FIRST AND SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION/ LEARNING
Pre-Referral to Special Education: Considerations
It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got that Swing
What is Language Acquisition?
2nd Language Learning Chapter 2 Lecture 4.
Communicative competence
Chapter 1.
Chapter 4.
TEMPLATE ELEMENTS.
Rubric (Four 5-point scale=20 points)
Presentation transcript:

Language Assessment What it measures and how Jill Kerper Mora, Ed.D

Dimensions of L2 Fluency Talking The ability to talk at length with few pauses; to fill time with talk The ability to have appropriate things to say in a wide range of contexts

Dimensions of L2 Fluency Vocabulary & Syntax The size and range of a speaker’s vocabulary and syntactical forms The ability to talk in coherent, reasoned and “semantically dense” sentences

Dimensions of L2 Fluency Knowing the Rules Knowledge of the various patterns of interaction and discourse for various situations and context Knowledge of the rules of conversation

Dimensions of L2 Fluency Creativity with Language The ability to be creative and imaginative with language; to express oneself in novel ways. The ability to invent and entertain; to take risks in linguistic expression

Measuring Fluency Instruments Using commercially designed language assessment instruments Teacher observation using a rating scale Informal observations of students’ behaviors

Commercial Assessment Instruments Classify students’ on a standardized scale from 1 to 5; 1=limited proficiency & 5=native speaker equivalent proficiency Proficiency scale is interpretable across school settings

The Observation Matrix (Solom) Student Oral Language Observation Matrix allows teachers to rate students’ according to L2 language used in a classroom context for academic purposes.

Uses of Language Assessment Appropriate bilingual/ESL program placement Diagnosis of language strengths and weaknesses Detection of patterns of systematic errors

Pre-systematic versus Systematic Errors The important distinction between “goofs” in early L2 development or interlanguage versus errors that are consistent and form patterns of incorrect usage

Types of L2 Learner Errors Transfer Errors Involve application of rules that hold in the first language but not in L2 Use of lexical forms pronounced as cognates when no such equivalent exists in L2

Types of L2 Learner Errors Overgeneralization The application of a general principle in the case of an exception Demonstrate a basic understanding of syntax and grammar, misapplied with a particular form

The “beating around the bush” errors The “beating around the bush” errors with the use of an incorrect word or syntactic form The lack of a precise use of vocabulary or idiomatic expressions Lack of use of the appropriate verb tense

Idiomatic Errors An attempt to translate a phrase or expression directly from L1 when the forms are not equivalent A misuse of certain phraseology or vocabulary words in a common expression

Idiosyncratic Errors L2 learner language unique to the individual Part of a system of approximations to the individual’s interpretation of native speaker models A natural part of L2 development