Preface John McE. Davis
Part 1. Connecting Assessment, Learners, and Learning
1. Developing Students' Self-Assessment Skills: The Role of the
Teacher Richard Kiely
2. Young Learners' Processes and Rationales for Responding to
Self-Assessment Items: Cases of Generic Can-Do and Five-Point,
Likert-Type FormatsYuko Goto Butler
3. The Impact of Self-Assessment on Learning and Teaching in
Technology-Mediated Language Education: User Perceptions of the
Teletandem Tracking Sheet Viviane Bagio Furtoso and Michael J.
Ferreira
4. An Integrated Approach to Foreign Language Instruction and
Assessment Keiko Koda and Junko Yamashita
5. Using Assessment to Promote Learning: Clarifying Constructs,
Theories, and PracticesConstant Leung, Chris Davison, Martin East,
Michael Evans, Yongcan Liu, Liz Hamp-Lyons, and James E.
Purpura
Part 2. Innovating, Framing, and Exploring Assessment in Language
Education
6. Linguistic Correlates of Proficiency (LCP): At the Intersection
of Testing and Teaching Svetlana V. Cook, Shauna J. Sweet, Alia
Lancaster, Nicholas B. Pandza, Scott R. Jackson, Eric Pelzl, Kira
Gor, and Catherine J. Doughty
7. Face-to-Face Speaking Assessment in the Digital Age: Interactive
Speaking Tasks Online Larry Davis, Veronika Timpe-Laughlin, Lin Gu,
and Gary Ockey
8. Task-Based Language Assessment for L1 and L2 Speakers in Primary
Education: Designing a Useful Task-Specification FrameworkKoen Van
Gorp
9. Predicting Placement Accuracy and Language Outcomes in
Immigrants' L2 Finnish Education Taina Tammelin-Laine, Ari Huhta,
Reeta Neittaanmaki, Tuija Hirvela, Sari Ohranen, and Elina
Stordell
Part 3. Validity Evaluation 10. University Entrance Language Tests:
Examining Assumed Equivalence Bart Deygers
11. Addressing Consequences and Validity during Test Design and
Development: Implementing the CAL Validation Framework Justin
Kelly, Jennifer Renn, and Jennifer Norton
12 Using a Validation Framework as a Guide for Planning Analyses
and Collecting Information in Preoperational and Operational
Testing Chih-Kai Lin and David MacGregor
13. Addressing Diversity in CALL Evaluation through Arguments and
Theory-of-Action Jim Ranalli
14. Validating Assessments for Meaning and Usefulness Michael T.
Kane
List of Editors and Contributors Index
"The perspectives offered in this volume present innovative research on foreign language learning from outside the academic contexts of theological education and religious studies."
John McE. Davis is John McE. Davis is Research Scientist at the
Center for English Language Learning and Assessment at the
Educational Testing Service, USA. His research interests include
language program evaluation, language assessment, and questionnaire
research methods.
John M. Norris is Senior Research Director of the Center for
English Language Learning and Assessment at the Educational Testing
Service, USA. His primary research interests include educational
uses of language assessment, program evaluation, task-based
language teaching, and research synthesis.
Margaret E. Malone is Director of the Assessment and
Evaluation Language Resource Center (AELRC) and Research Professor
at Georgetown University and Director of the Center for Assessment,
Research and Development at ACTFL. Her current research focuses on
language assessment literacy, oral proficiency assessment and the
relative difficulty of learning different languages.
Todd H. McKay is a Ph.D. candidate in applied linguistics and
research assistant with the AELRC at Georgetown University. His
research interests include language assessment, language program
evaluation, and applied measurement, with emphases on the less
commonly taught languages and language programs in South Asia.
Young-A Son is a PhD candidate in the Department of Linguistics at
Georgetown University. Her research interests include the
assessment of foreign and heritage language learners. More
specifically, her work examines validation of language tests and
other indicators of language proficiency for research as well as
instructional purposes.
Raises the need for further research in many areas related to
language assessment and evaluation, and draws attention to the many
challenges that remain for language teachers tasked with
implementing assessments within the Assessment for Learning
framework. Overall, this collection of well-written studies is
laudable in the contribution it makes to this field of
research.
*Teachers College Record*
The perspectives offered in this volume present innovative research
on foreign language learning from outside the academic contexts of
theological education and religious studies.
*The Wabash Center Journal On Teaching*
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