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TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
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TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Mar 28, 2015

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Page 1: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING

PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE

Geoff BrindleyMacquarie University,

Sydney, Australia

Page 2: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Structure of the presentation

1. Introduction2. Task-based assessment: Definitions andfeatures3. Implementing TBA: Differing stakeholderperspectives

-Theoretical perspectives -Educational versus managerial perspectives

4. The need for assessment literacy5. Conclusion

Page 3: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Defining task-based assessment

“… the process of evaluating, in relation to a set of explicitly stated criteria, the quality of the communicative performances elicited from learners as part of goal-directed, meaning-focused language use requiring the integration of skills and knowledge” (Brindley, 1994)

UK-Teacher assessment to be used for statutory reporting at 11 and14 in Wales US

Page 4: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Positive features of TBA

Teachers' and learners' attention is able to be more focused on language as a tool for real world communication rather than on language knowledge as an end in itself, thus potentially improving student motivation.

Assessment can be integrated into the learning process through the use of attainment targets which are directly linked to course content and objectives.

Page 5: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Positive features of TBA (contd)

Learners can obtain useful diagnostic feedback on their progress and achievement since explicit performance criteria are provided against which they can compare their performances.

Better communication between users of assessment information and educational institutions can be established through the use of various forms of outcome reporting which are couched in performance terms and are hence intelligible to non-specialists.

Page 6: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The shift to teacher-led assessment

UK-Teacher assessment given greater importancefollowing review of National Curriculum Assessment -Teacher assessment used for reporting from2007 in Wales-Government “Excellence and Enjoyment” report

(DfES2003) endorses greater role for teachers in

assessment-Tomlinson Report (2002) endorses use of teacherassessment for national reporting

Page 7: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The shift to teacher-led assessment (contd)

USA-Widespread adoption of “authentic” TBA

in schools & adult education-Use of authentic teacher-conductedassessments in some high stakes

contexts (egKentucky, Nebraska)

Page 8: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Differing theoretical perspectives on TBA: What is the construct?

“Weak” versus “strong” view of TBA:

“…in the strong sense, tasks will represent real-world tasks, and performance will be judged on real-world criteria, that is, the fulfilment of the task set” (McNamara 1996)

Page 9: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Differing theoretical approaches to TBA (contd)

“In second language performance tests in the weak sense, the focus is on language performance….The candidate is required to perform on a task which may represent tasks he or she may subsequently face in the real world; however, the capacity to perform the task is not the actual focus of the assessment”

Page 10: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The problem of generalizability

“While the ‘weak’ view is likely to assess underlying language skills in ways which are relatively broadly generalizable, the ‘strong’ view is likely to produce judgments which are more authentic and relevant to the real life situations towards which candidates may be moving. These judgments about the quality of performance may not, however, be replicable in other contexts” (Wigglesworth 2008).

Page 11: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Some other unresolved theoretical issues in TBA

The difficulty of “difficulty” How can task difficulty be defined &

measured? What are the factors affecting task

difficulty? Can task difficulty be modelled and

predicted?

(Bachman, 2002, 2007; Brindley & Slatyer, 2002; Brown

et al, 2002; Elder et al 2002; Ellis, 2008; Robinson,2001; Skehan, 1998, 2001; Tavakoli, 2009)

Page 12: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Educational versus managerial perspectives

“ Whereas politicians and government officials tend to see assessment as a tool for implementing and managing policy, teachers and educationists are primarily concerned with ways in which it can be used for the improvement of learning “ (Brindley, 2008)

Page 13: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Formative TBA: The educational policy maker perspective

Effective assessment for all pupils should:-recognise what pupils can do and reward achievement-be based on different kinds of evidence-be a valid reflection of what has been taught orcovered in class-be reliable in terms of enabling someone else to repeatthe assessment and obtain comparable results-be manageable, both in terms of the time needed tocomplete the task, and in providing results which canbe reported or passed on to other teachers (DfES,2003:2)

Page 14: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The formative purpose of TBA: rhetoric or reality?

No reference to: monitoring learners’ emerging language

awareness and development: achievement is highlighted

assessment as integrated within instructional discourse. “Taught or covered” suggests one-off measurement focused assessment

formative assessment as an on-going process Leung and Rea-Dickins, 2007)

Page 15: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Popular beliefs about testing & assessment

There is a test for every population/purpose

Norm-referenced tests are a fair and objective measure of student ability

Standardized testing raises standards All tests have pass marks (usually 50%) Teachers can’t be trusted to do their

own assessment

Page 16: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The media critics

Formative assessment also embraces a developmental approach to learning, based on the argument that "students develop and learn at different rates and in different ways"…

The result? Instead of pass or fail, student progress or lack of progress is clouded by such politically correct terms as beginning, established, consolidating or emerging, solid, comprehensive.

Instead of students facing regular examinations with consequences for failure, as do those students in stronger performing education systems overseas, students are automatically promoted from year to year, even though many have not mastered the basics (Donnelly 2005)

Page 17: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The politicians

“The reports I saw allowed for the teacher to assess students from a range of choices – usually, consolidating, sometimes, and not yet’. What kind of nonsense is this?

The educational “experts” with whom I seem to be in constant battle, give me the constant refrain of “outcomes assessment”. The ranking of students against one another is opposed by teacher advocates. Try telling that to parents. Worse still, what do they think happens in the real world? (Nelson 2005)

Page 18: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

“ Politicians are simple people; they like simple people; they like simple choices and clear guidance.”

(Yes Minister)

Page 19: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

The role of assessment literacy

“..training for assessment literacy entails an appropriate balance of technical know-how, practical skills, theoretical knowledge, and understanding of principles but all firmly contextualized within a sound understanding of the role and function of assessment within education and society” (Taylor, 2009)

Page 20: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Assessment literacy for all

“ …an appropriate level of assessment literacy needs to be nurtured not just among engineers and technicians who are actively involved in test development or research activities, or even among applied linguists and language teachers…but more broadly in the public domain if a better understanding of the function and values of assessment tools and their outcomes is to be realized throughout society” (Taylor, 2009)

Page 21: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Assessment and the language teacher: What skills & knowledge do they need?

Teachers should be skilled in choosing assessment methods appropriate for instructional decisions.

Teachers should be skilled in administering, scoring and interpreting the results of both externally-produced and teacher-produced assessment methods

Page 22: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Assessment and the language teacher: What skills & knowledge do they need?

Teachers should be skilled in developing, using and evaluating valid student grading procedures which use student assessments.

Teachers should be skilled in communicating assessment results to students, educational decision makers and other concerned stakeholders.

Page 23: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Assessment and the language teacher: What skills & knowledge do they need?

Teachers should be skilled in using assessment results when making decisions about individual students, planning teaching, developing curriculum, and institutional improvement.

Teachers should be skilled in recognizing unethical, illegal, and otherwise inappropriate assessment methods and uses of assessment information

Page 24: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Components of assessment literacy (Bailey & Brown, Brindley, 2001, Inbar-Lourie, 2008, Taylor, 2009)

The social and political context of assessment

Defining and describing language proficiency

Constructing and evaluating tests and assessment tasks

Assessment in the curriculum Putting assessment into practice

Page 25: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Professional development on assessment: some guiding principles (Brindley 2001)

Involve the whole system Capitalize on existing practices Recognise and address the reality and

constraints affecting assessment Encourage a research orientation Plan for change

Page 26: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Teacher involvement in collaborative test/assessment task development

“…the discussion time and the time to sit down with people and discuss something has been very valuable. And then I’m discussing with other people who are also interested in these things. And they ask me about tasks sometimes, they bring me a task and say ‘What do you think about this’?”

Page 27: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Teacher involvement in collaborative test/assessment task development

“ After doing this project, I realized that setting a test paper is not an easy task. Instead of testing what is easy to test, we have to construct tests that we really discover how successful the learning experiences had been for the students rather than to show in what respects they had been deficient” (Teacher participant cited in Coniam 2009).

Page 28: TASK-BASED ASSESSMENT IN LANGUAGE LEARNING PROGRAMS: PIECES OF THE PUZZLE Geoff Brindley Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

And in conclusion..

“We believe that a new breed of assessment literate educators with extensive experience in classrooms will play an important role in implementing assessment policies that truly support student learning”.

(Lukin et al 2004)