Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
…
10 pages
1 file
TOPIC 3: Prepare a diagnostic test for a class of students you are about to take over. You should specify the age and approximate suspected level of the students. Briefly explain the purpose of each section of the test. State any limits imposed; state the expected duration. TESOL Diploma Program; Module-3 Assignment-1
Citeseer
arten-Grade 12) English as a Second Language (ESL) ceive ructional services for students at the following school sites:
The studies about the use of portfolio assessment in foreign language teaching show that the portfolio assessment improves writing skills; however, foreign language skills are not limited to writing skill alone. Reading, speaking and listening skills are also important. Portfolio provides the students with the opportunity to see themselves as with special interests and needs in reading skill. The aim of this study is to examine the impact of portfolio as a descriptive assessment method on the development of Iranian EFL students' reading comprehension ability based on junior high school English textbook, Prospect 2. To this end, 20 Iranian EFL students all female from a guidance school were selected. The control group members (n=10) received traditional assessment and the experimental group members (n=10) received the portfolio assessment based on Prospect 2. Two reading comprehension tests as pretest and posttest were given to the students of both groups to find out their reading comprehension ability at the beginning and at the end of the treatment. In order to perform statistical analysis, descriptive and inferential statistical methods were applied. The results of the study did not show the superiority of portfolio method over conventional scoring method in the development of the students’ reading comprehension. The results have some implications and suggestions for assessment, teaching and learning.
2002
This exploratory qualitative case study examines the introduction of the self-assessment portfolio as a method of
Each publication is reviewed by at least two external reviewers.
The current program was designed for any language centers that are situated in a non-English speaking country and is for those international adult students who would like to take the IELTS Speaking test (the oral component of IELTS). The program will allow them to revise the latest English course they took before it. The participation of both the low and the high level students in the program is its necessary condition. More specifically, the current program should help the low level students to break through the fear barrier of a conversation in English and to improve their vocabulary as well as their pronunciation skills. The high level students in turn will have a large possibility to make their speech more grammatically correct and acquire the accuracy of use of such specific grammatical features as verb tense, third person singular, plural markets, prepositions, and article use. So, building learner capacity to successfully perform on speaking tasks either in a test of English for academic or working purposes or in a real-life communication situation is a key concern of this program. To assist with this objective, its learners will be asked to take part in a ten-week English speaking course named English Discussion Club as a Means of Students’ Integration into English Speaking Learning Environment and a Way to Successfully Pass the IELT Speaking Test.
efdergi.hacettepe.edu.tr
In this article the researcher has examined the current situation in test (a) construction: designing, structuring, developing, (b) administering, and (c) assessing the foreign language tests to see if we are still at the same point (traditional) and has given some suggestions on this indispensable issue. To collect the necessary data the 4 th year students doing their practicum studies at a state high school in Ankara under the supervision of the researcher are asked to collect one sample of each test (written or oral form) their mentors have been using to assess their foreign language students. The common characteristics of the test samples are scrutinized in terms of validity and reliability, language skills and areas including spelling, contextualization, time, typing, students' foreign language level (simple or complex structures), instructions, and backwash effect. Relying on the findings of the study some recommendations have been made for foreign language teachers.
This paper reports on a study exploring variation and change in language proficiency amongst international undergraduate students who had been identified as requiring English language support. Specifically, it investigates changes in IELTS scores and in students' perceptions of language proficiency in their first semester of study.
2000
... Record Details - ED445037. Title: An Analysis of State Policies for the Inclusion and Accommodation of English Language Learners in State Assessment Programs during 1998-1999. Final Report. ... Languages: English. Education Level: Elementary Secondary Education. ...
A study sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs, and published by the George Washington University Center for Equity and Excellence in Education, 2000
This report presents a description of state policies regarding the participation of English language learners (ELLs) in statewide assessment programs during the 1998-1999 school year. The data collected included descriptions of policies: (1) for the inclusion and exemption of ELLS; (2) regarding the allowance or prohibition of accommodations in general as well as specific types of accommodations; (3) regarding the inclusion of accommodated test scores in state, district, and school totals; and (4) for use of alternate assessments and policies for reporting the resulting scores. The study is based on the direct analysis of documents provided primarily by directors of bilingual and English-as-a-Second-Language education in each state (two states do not have state assessment programs). Findings show that while almost all states (48) have exclusion/exemption policies, there is great variability in the degree to which state policies address aspects of ELL participation. Forty-six states allow some form of exemption. One finding of note is the absence of academic criteria from the list of criteria to be considered when making inclusion/exemption decisions. States offer accommodations that can be divided into presentation, response, setting, and timing/scheduling categories. Most state policies do not specify that a person with professional knowledge of language learning processes participate in the decision making process. Policies regarding alternate assessment measures for ELLs are absent from most state assessment programs. The report recommends that states review and revise their existing policies to align them with current legislation and good practice. Three appendixes contain study cover letters, discussions of documentation and alternate assessment, and the fourth appendix contains the individual state reports on state inclusion and accommodation policies. (Contains 11 tables, 18 figures, and 33 references.) (SLD)
Bulletin of The Comediantes, 2021
Revegetation of areas degraded by mining in the cerrado: the use of sewage sludge in soil rehabilitation, 2024
Science. Business. Society., 2021
Jura Gentium, XX 2, 2023
BORNEO BINA MITRA, 2019
Sensors and Actuators B-chemical, 2021
Frontiers in Virology
Angewandte Chemie, 2020
Road and Rail Infrastructure V
Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids, 1985
PLoS ONE, 2011
Cancer immunology research, 2018
Central Philippine University, 2019