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Testing the Untestable in Language Education [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 280 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 210x148x21 mm, kaal: 468 g
  • Sari: New Perspectives on Language and Education
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Jun-2010
  • Kirjastus: Multilingual Matters
  • ISBN-10: 1847692664
  • ISBN-13: 9781847692665
  • Formaat: Hardback, 280 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 210x148x21 mm, kaal: 468 g
  • Sari: New Perspectives on Language and Education
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Jun-2010
  • Kirjastus: Multilingual Matters
  • ISBN-10: 1847692664
  • ISBN-13: 9781847692665
The testing and assessment of language competence continues to be a much debated issue in foreign language teaching and research. This book is the first one to address the testing of four important dimensions of foreign language education which have been left largely unconsidered: learner autonomy, intercultural competence, literature and literary competence, and the integration of content and language learning. Each area is considered through a theoretical framework, followed by two empirical studies, raising questions of importance to all language teachers: How can one test literary competence? Can intercultural competence be measured? What about the integrated assessment of content-and-language in CLIL and teaching? Is progress in autonomous learning skill gaugeable? The book constitutes essential reading for anyone interested in the testing and assessment of seemingly largely untestable aspects of foreign language competence.

"The title of this book is well chosen. Despite the apparent oxymoron, this collection of papers succeeds in addressing important issues of educational policy and theory with the precision born of empirical work combined with discussion of principles. This book will open new options for testers, for teachers and for those who make policy decisions."-Michael Byram, School of Education, University of Durham, UK

Amos Paran is Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Education, University of London, where he is Programme Leader of the MA TESOL. He has a special interest in master's level teaching by distance learning, and has also been involved in testing projects in a variety of different languages. His main research interests are reading in a foreign language, literature in language teaching, and distance education.

Lies Sercu is an Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Leuven. Her research interests concern the promotion of intercultural competence through foreign language education as well as SLA vocabulary acquisition from reading and writing texts in a foreign language. She has been involved in the development of language tests and blended learning environments for the professionalisation of language teachers. She has published widely in major international journals on intercultural competence and foreign vocabulary acquisition.

Arvustused

The title of this book is well chosen. Despite the apparent oxymoron, this collection of papers succeeds in addressing important issues of educational policy and theory with the precision born of empirical work combined with discussion of principles. This book will open new options for testers, for teachers and for those who make policy decisions. * Michael Byram, School of Education, University of Durham, UK * The book brings together double sets of constructs which represent in their own right whole areas of academic investigation. Each section provides both theoretical underpinning and empirical studies which in turn offer a wide array of pedagogical initiatives and alleyways to explore. As such, it makes a very valuable contribution to the understanding of each dimension while providing pragmatic guidelines for practitioners interested in rising to the challenge of developing meaningful testing procedures. Christine Penman, School of Marketing, Tourism & Languages, Edinburgh Napier University, UK in Language and Intercultural Communication * Vol. 12, No. 4, November 2012, 388-390 *

Contributors vii
1 More than Language: The Additional Faces of Testing and Assessment in Language Learning and Teaching
1(16)
Amos Paran
Part 1: Intercultural Competence
2 Assessing Intercultural Competence: More Questions than Answers
17(18)
Lies Sercu
3 Interculturally Savvy or Not? Developing and Assessing Intercultural Competence in the Context of Learning for Business
35(17)
Kaisu Korhonen
4 Eliciting the Intercultural in Foreign Language Education at School
52(25)
Anthony J. Liddicoat
Angela Scarino
Part 2: Autonomy
5 Measuring Autonomy: Should We Put Our Ability to the Test?
77(21)
Phil Benson
6 Assessment of Autonomy or Assessment for Autonomy? Evaluating Learner Autonomy for Formative Purposes
98(22)
Terry Lamb
7 Learners Reflecting on Learning: Evaluation versus Testing in Autonomous Language Learning
120(23)
Leni Dam
Lienhard Legenhausen
Part 3: Literature
8 Between Scylla and Charybdis: The Dilemmas of Testing Language and Literature
143(22)
Amos Paran
9 Crossing the Bridge from Appreciative Reader to Reflective Writer: The Assessment of Creative Process
165(26)
Jane Spiro
10 The Taming of the Immeasurable: An Empirical Assessment of Language Awareness
191(26)
Hui-wei Lin
Part 4: Language and Content
11 Assessing Language and Content: A Functional Perspective
217(24)
Bernard Mohan
Constant Leung
Tammy Slater
12 Teachers and Texts: Judging What English Language Learners Know From What They Say
241(15)
Marylin Low
13 Towards Systematic and Sustained Formative Assessment of Causal Explanations in Oral Interactions
256
Tammy Slater
Bernard Mohan
Amos Paran is Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Education, University of London, where he is Programme Leader of the MA TESOL. He has a special interest in master’s level teaching by distance learning, and has also been involved in testing projects in a variety of different languages. His main research interests are reading in a foreign language, literature in language teaching, and distance education.





Lies Sercu is an Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Leuven. Her research interests concern the promotion of intercultural competence through foreign language education as well as SLA vocabulary acquisition from reading and writing texts in a foreign language. She has been involved in the development of language tests and blended learning environments for the professionalisation of language teachers. She has widely published in major international journals on intercultural competence and foreign vocabulary acquisition.