Friday, March 27, 2020
TESTING SPEAKING AND LISTENING
https://www.linkrita.com/Testing Speaking and Listening
TESTING SPEAKING AND LISTENING
TEST
Definition
A
test is a method of measuring of person ability,knowledge or performance in a
given domain.
Test-Taking
Strategies
Before Test
1) Give
students all information you can about the test.
2) Encourage
students to do a systematic review of material,
3) Give
them practice tests or excercises,if available
4) Facilitate
formation of a study group,if possible
5) Caution
students to get a good night’s rest before the test
6) Remind
students to get to the classroom early.
During
the test
1) After
the test is distributed,tell students to look over the whole test quickly in
order to get a good grasp of it diferent parts
2) Remind
them to mentally figure out how much time they will need for each part
3) Advise
them to concentrate as carefully as possible
4) Warm
students a few minutes before the end of the class period so that they can
finish on time,proofread their answers,and catch careless errors.
After
the test
1) When
you return the test,include feedback on specific things the student did
well,what he or she didn’t do well,nd,if possible,the reason for your comments
2) Advise
students to pay careful attention in class to whatever you say about the test
result
3) Encourage
questions from students
4) Advise
students to pay special attention in the future to points on which they are
weak
The principle of languange assesment :
·
Practicality
·
Validity
·
Authenticity
·
Wash back
·
Direc and indirect
testing
·
Formative
TESTING
SPEAKING AND LISTENING
From
a pragmatic view of languange performance,listening and speaking ar almost
always closely interrelated.
SPEAKING
Definition
Speaking
is an act of making vocal sounds.We can say that speaking means to converse,or
expressing ones thoughts and feelings in spoken languange.To speak often
implies conveying information.It may be form an informal remark to a scholarly
presentation to a formal adess.Speaking is the production skills in the oral
mode.It,like the other skills,is more complicated than it seems as first
involves more than just pronouncing words.
Speaking Skills :
Ø Speaking
skills are the skills that give us the ability to communicate effectively
Ø These
skills allow the speaker,to convey his message in a passionate,thoughtful,and
convicing manner.
Ø Speaking
skills also help to assure that one won’t be misunderstood by those who are
listening
Basic Types of Speaking
1) Imitative,the
ability to simply parrot back a word or phrase or possibly a sentence
2) Intensive,the
production of short stretchs of oral languange designed to demonstrated
competence in a narrow band of grammatical,phrasal,lexical,or phonological
realtuonship
3) Responsive,Include
interaction and test comprehension but at the somewhat limited level of very
short conversation,standart greetings and small talk.
4) Interactive,the
length and complexy of the interaction,which is sometimes includes multiple
exchanges.
5) Extensive,Include
speeches,oral presentation,and story telling,during which the opportunity for
oral interaction from listener is limited.
Testing Speaking
Testing speaking
is the method used to test one’s speaking ability.How well they able to master
vocabulary,determine intonation,etc.
Testing Speaking is probably the most difficult skill to
test. It involves a combination of skills that may have no correlation with
each other, and which do not lend themselves well to objective testing. There
are not yet good answers to questions about the criteria for testing these
skills and the weighting of these factors.Success in speaking depends to a
great extent on the listener. Comprehension of spoken material depends, among
other factors, on the degree to which the listener is familiar with the
speaker's accent and the degree to which they share background knowledge, and
so what is a problem for one listener may not be a problem for another listener.
Another difficulty is separating the listening skill from the speaking skill.
The following content specification
for the TSE represent the discourse and pragmatic content specifications for
the TSE represent the discourse and pragmatic context assesed in each
adminitration :
1) Decribe
something physical
2) Narrate
from presented material
3) Summarize
information of the speakers’ own choice
4) Give
intructions
5) Give
an opinion
6) Compare/Contrast
7) Hypothesize
8) Function
9) Define
THE WAY TO DO SPEAKING
TEST
1.Reading
Aloud
One of the best effective ways is testing students by
having them read something aloud. It offers several advantages and some
significant disadvantages. This technique provides good control. All your
students respond in the same way, and so we can make comparisons quite simply.
Tests of this kind are generally easy to prepare and to administer, and they
avoid our having to find a suitable topic for students to discuss. Besides
checking pronunciation, we can see how well our students have mastered the
sound – symbol relationships in the English
language.
2.
Conversational Exchanges
Type 1
Students
are asked to construct a sentence following a certain pattern using the
information that they are given. They are usually given two or three examples
first.
For example:
Tom has been working at
the same job for ten years. He is tired of his job and would like to do some
thing more interesting.(He wishes he could find a more interesting job.)
Type 2
In another type of
conversational exchange test, a situation is given but no guidance is given as
to how to answer, and the student can respond freely.
For instance: A friend of yours has been tired
a lot recently. What do you say to her? You have been served coffee in a
restaurant but you haven't been given any cream or sugar, and you would like
some. What do you say to the server? (Could I have some cream and sugar.)
Type 3
In another type of text, the student is given a stimulus
sentence and can respond in any appropriate way. This type of test usually
depends on conventional responses, such as responses to requests, invitations
and etc. Could I borrow your book ?(Sure, go ahead./ Sorry, I'm using it.) Hey,
how are you doing?(Just fine, how are you?)
This may also be
done as part of a longer dialogue, where there are pauses for the tester’s
responses to questions on a tape. The problem with this sort of test is that
the dialogue on the tape keeps going along, no matter what the tester says,
whether the next line on the tape is appropriate or not. In addition, it is
testing listening at least as much as it is testing speaking. However, this
type of test does make it possible to test large numbers of people at the same
time in away that is at least somewhat communicative.
3.Oral
Interviews
Oral interviews are testing situations in which the
tester and the testers carry on a conversation. The tester generally has a list
of questions to ask the tester, and someone--either the interviewer or another
person but preferably another person--assesses the language proficiency of the
tester. The advantage of an interview is that it attempts to approximate a
conversation situation, but the knowledge that it is a test and the constraints
of the roles in the interview make it difficult to have a real natural
conversation.
4.Role
Play Test
Another type of
test is a role play. In a role play the testee and a confederate are given
information on which to base a role play, and the testees are evaluated on
their ability to carry out the task in the role play. For example, the role
play might be getting information about course requirements. Role plays require
the testee to use various functions tha the/she might need in real
communication.
5.Group
or Pair Activities
To avoid the types
of problems associated with oral interviews, sometimes students are put
together in pairs or groups that are given some task, such as the ones
mentioned above in the section on using visual materials. They might also be
given a quiz to work on together, a puzzle to work out, or a task. The point of
these is not to find the "right" answer but to stimulate speech for
the tester to evaluate. This is intended to be a less inhibiting situation than
an interview test, but it also has the problem of lack of control. How the
activity goes depends to a great extent on the mix of testees that are put
together. If their level of English proficiency is widely different, or if one
testee is particularly dominant, this will influence the interaction. A
well-trained interviewer can provide similar environments from one interview to
another, but this is not possible in testing a group of testees in a group
activity. In addition, successful group discussions depend on factors other
than speaking, including active listening and eliciting the opinions of all of
the group members.
LISTENING
Definition
Listening is the first of the four
languange skils,which are : Listening,Speaking,Reading,Writing.In our own
languange,listening is usually the first languange skill that we learn.
To become a fluent speaker in
English,you need to develop strong listening skills.Listening skills not only
help you to understand what people are saying to you.It also helps you to speak
clearly to other people.It helps you learn how to pronounce words properly,how
to use intonation,and where to place stress in words and sentences.This makes
your speech easier for other people listening to you to understand.
The Basic Types
1) Intensive,listening
for perception of the components (phonemes,words,intonation,discourse
markers,etc)
2) Responsive,Listening
to a relatively short strech of languange (a
greeting,question,command,comprehension check,etc.)
3) Selective,processing
streches of discourse such as short monologues for several minutes in order to
“scan” for certain information.
4) Extensive,Listening
to develop a top down,global understanding of spoken languange.
The basic Structure
Good listening lessons go beyond the
listening task itself with related activities before and after the listening.
Here is the basic structure:
Before
Listening
Prepare your learners by introducing
the topic and finding out what they already know about it. A good way to do
this is to have a brainstorming session and some discussion questions related to
the topic. Then provide any necessary background information and new vocabulary
they will need for the listening activity.
During
Listening
Be specific about what students need
to listen for. They can listen for selective details or general content, or for
an emotional tone such as happy, surprised, or angry. If they are not marking
answers or otherwise responding while listening, tell them ahead of time what
will be required afterward.
After
Listening
Finish with an activity to extend the
topic and help students remember new vocabulary. This could be a discussion
group, craft project, writing task, game, etc.
The following ideas
will help make your listening activities successful.
1.Noise
Reduce distractions and noise during
the listening segment. You may need to close doors or windows or ask children
in the room to be quiet for a few minutes.
2.Equipment
If you are using a cassette player,
make sure it produces acceptable sound quality. A counter on the machine will
aid tremendously in cueing up tapes. Bring extra batteries or an extension cord
with you.
3.Repetition
Read or play the text a total of 2-3
times. Tell students in advance you will repeat it. This will reduce their
anxiety about not catching it all the first time. You can also ask them to
listen for different information each time through.
4.Content
Unless your text is merely a list of
items, talk about the content as well as specific language used. The material
should be interesting and appropriate for your class level in topic, speed, and
vocabulary. You may need to explain reductions (like 'gonna' for 'going to')
and fillers (like 'um' or 'uh-huh').
5.Recording
Your Own Tape
Write appropriate text (or use
something from your textbook) and have another English speaker read it onto
tape. Copy the recording three times so you don't need to rewind. The reader
should not simply read three times, because students want to hear exact
repetition of the pronunciation, intonation, and pace, not just the words.
6.Video
You can play a video clip with the
sound off and ask students to make predictions about what dialog is taking
place. Then play it again with sound and discuss why they were right or wrong
in their predictions. You can also play the sound without the video first, and
show the video after students have guessed what is going on.
7.Homework
Give students a listening task to do
between classes. Encourage them to listen to public announcements in airports,
bus stations, supermarkets, etc. and try to write down what they heard. Tell
them the telephone number of a cinema and ask them to write down the playing
times of a specific movie. Give them a tape recording of yourself with
questions, dictation, or a worksheet to complete.
General
Listening Types:
The two main types of
listening - the foundations of all listening sub-types are:
1.
Discriminative
Listening
2.
Comprehensive Listening
A.Discriminative
Listening
Discriminative listening is first developed at a very
early age – perhaps even before birth, in the womb. This is the most basic form of listening and
does not involve the understanding of the meaning of words or phrases but
merely the different sounds that are produced.
In early childhood, for example, a distinction is made between the
sounds of the voices of the parents – the voice of the father sounds different
to that of the mother.
B.Comprehensive
Listening
Comprehensive listening involves understanding the
message or messages that are being communicated. Like discriminative listening, comprehensive listening
is fundamental to all listening sub-types.
In order to be able use
comprehensive listening and therefore gain understanding the listener first
needs appropriate vocabulary and language skills. Using overly complicated
language or technical jargon, therefore, can be a barrier to comprehensive
listening.
C.Testing Listening
Comprehension
Given the complexity of the listening construct—as
described in the first of this series of articles, in which I described the
listening construct—it is crucial to use listening comprehension texts that
allow valid assessment of that construct. At the very least, this means that
texts have the characteristics of real spoken language and are structured in
such a way that they allow item writers to write items that target important
comprehension skills.
TESTING
LISTENING
The practical
implications of this for test development are as follows:
Good Texts for Testing
Listening:
1.
are well recorded,
clear with limited noise;
2.
have the linguistic
characteristics of equivalent real-world texts; and
3.
are structured so they
support good items.
The most common test
items are designed to test the listeners’ comprehension.
They
are the process approach and the product approach of testing listening :
1. The Process Approach
The first of these, the process approach, attempts to
identify the various sub-skills or processes used in listening and then tries
to assess whether the testee has mastered these or not. This is not so easy, as
we have already seen that the process of listening is complex and can vary
according to the world knowledge and interests of the listener. However, we do
know that both listeners and readers use their linguistic and world knowledge
to generate hypotheses about the language they are comprehending. They do not
need to get all the information (either graphic or acoustic) contained in a
message in order to comprehend, because the language contains more information
than is necessary. It is, in other words, highly redundant, and we can use that
fact to test language comprehension. We can give the students a passage in
which some of the information is missing (words or parts of words) and
reasonably expect them to understand it. And if they understand it, we can also
reasonably expect them to be able to replace the missing information.
a.
Listening Cloze Tests
Some
test makers have used listening cloze tests, in which the students usually get
a written passage from which certain words have been replaced by blanks, as in
the standard written cloze test, and then they listen to a recording of the
passage and try to fill in the blanks from what they have heard. There are a
number of problems with this technique. One is that students can often treat
the passage as a normal cloze test, and fill in the blanks even if they didn't
hear the passage very well, in which case it is no longer a listening test at
all. One way around this is to put the blanks on high-information content
words, which tend to be more difficult to guess from linguistic knowledge
(Henning, Gary, & Gary , 1983). But even then it doesn't make a very
satisfactory listening test, as students usually find themselves simply
listening for individual words rather than trying to understand and interpret a
passage. In many cases such a test would be little different from a word
recognition test. In terms of washback on the classroom the objections to the
noise test seem to be equally applicable to the listening cloze.
b.
Dictation
One
test type which is in many ways related to the reduced redundancy tests and which
has been very widely used is the dictation. This was criticized by Lado (1961,
p. 34) as being little more than a test of spelling, but work in the 1970s has
indicated that dictation can be a good measure of general language proficiency
(Oller, 1979; Oakeshott-Taylor, 1977). Basically, the general idea is that
although a passage may be redundant for first language users, it will be much
less so for second language users. Thus, the extent to which second language
users can utilize the redundancy in the language is a good measure of their
language ability. For those who don't know the technique, dictation usually
involves hearing a passage twice. The first time the passage is played straight
through, and students just listen and try to understand. The second time they
hear it, the passage is broken into a n~mber of short sections with a pause
between each section. During that pause students have to write down what they
have just heard.
2. The Product Approach
As we can now see, the main problem with testing the
process of listening comprehension is that we don't really know enough about
it. An obvious alternative approach is to test the product of listening. We can
give students a passage to listen to and then see if they understood it. The
drawback with this approach is that the product of the listening comprehension
process is not easily available for inspection. It lies inside the student and
we cannot record it, or take it home for grading. Assessing listening ability
is an indirect process. We have to give students some task which we think is
dependent on comprehending a piece of language, and then try to infer from that
whether we think they understood the language or not. The task most commonly
given to students is answering questions, but it could also be filling in a
grid, or marking a place on a map or chart. Picture identification tasks are
also sometimes used. Naturally, it is important that completing the task is
dependent on understanding the text. Care should be taken that task completion really
does require comprehension of the text. It is surprising how often a good guess
can be made at the right answer without even hearing the actual text.
a.
A Purpose for Listening
In
"real life, " when we listen to anything, we virtually always listen
with some purpose, even if the purpose is something as vague as general
interest. If we want to replicate real-life listening, it is very important to
give students a purpose for listening. This also relieves them from the
necessity of trying to remember all the information in the passage, which is a
very unnatural thing to do (and generally impossible), although it is quite
common for students to try to do so in important testing situations. There are
a number of ways the listening purpose can be set up, but perhaps the simplest
is just to give students the questions before they hear the passage. A somewhat
more interesting alternative is to give specific instructions about the
listening situation and the purpose of their listening, a sort of listening role-play,
and then allow students to select the relevant information for themselves.
b.
Authenticity
Another
important consideration is the nature of the texts used. There is currently a
very strong trend in language teaching to provide
students
with "authentic" language. While it is often difficult to be specific
about exactly what we mean by authentic (Besse, 1981), the trend is an
admirable one. Obviously, if we want our students to learn a language, we must
give them realistic language to learn, and have them engage in realistic
language activities with it. Of course, in one sense, the language learning
classroom itself is not really an authentic situation, and the testing
situation is even less an authentic communicative situation than the classroom.
Whatever we try to get our students to do, however much we try to set up
authentic situations, our students' prime concern will be to get high marks on
the test. Nevertheless, given the tremendous washback effect of the test on the
classroom, test makers owe it to teachers and students to use texts which are
as authentic as possible, in order to encourage students to study authentic
texts in the classroom.
c.
Making Multiple Choice
Tests
In
most standardized tests, such as the TOEFL or TOEIC, it is normal to use
mUltiple choice questions to test comprehension. These are very convenient to
score with modern high-speed marking machines, but making them, however, is not
so easy. Not only do we have to write a sensible question and provide the
correct answer, but we must think of three distractors, or alternative answers,
which must look like attractive possibilities to those who did not understand
the text, but which are clearly wrong to those who did. This is extremely
difficult to do. Multiple choice items are very complex, and it is often
difficult to tell how they are going to work by just looking at them. Therefore
it is necessary to pre-test them on students similar to those who are to take
the test, and then subject the results to statistical analysis in order to find
out which items are good and which are not. Bad questions, or distractors which
are not distracting any of the students, can then be rewritten; and it may
often be necessary to reject or rewrite large numbers of the items. Using such
a method, it is quite possible to produce tests which have very satisfactory
statistical properties. However, pre-testing important entrance examination
questions in Japan is generally considered impossible, which suggests that test
makers should avoid using multiple choice questions.
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