Title: ESL Assessment Toolbox
1ESL Assessment Toolbox
- By
- Denise Forrest
- Edu 525
- 6/26/08
2Table of Contents
- Immigration, CLD and ELL Trends
- Pros and cons of high stakes testing
- Categories and types of tests
- 3 components of a Good Assessment
- Cultural Bias
- Authentic Assessments
- Formal vs. Informal Assessment
- Acculturation Theories
- My Assessment Philosophy
3Immigration Trends in the U.S. (pg 7)
- Its been going on since at least the 1500s, from
Spanish and French explorers and missionaries, to
English settlers, to immigrants from around the
globe coming here, by choice or by force. - Immigrants are coming to live in non-traditional
receiving communities (like Omaha, rather than
New York). - By 2010, it is estimated that foreign-born
immigrants will make up 13 of the U.S.
population. - (But consider In the 1800s, during the height of
European immigration, foreign-born immigrants
made up 15 of the population.)
4CLDs in the Classroom Trends (pg. 9-10)
- There are ever growing numbers of Culturally and
Linguistically Diverse (CLD) students in American
classrooms (many of whom were born and have lived
their whole lives in the U.S.) - The fastest growing immigrant nationality is
Mexican. - Hispanics are becoming the ethnic majority (in
terms of population size) in many cities and
states. - CLD students are statistically more likely to
come from poverty-stricken homes. - Many CLD students have parents who are living in
America as undocumented workers. - More CLD students enter American schools in
middle or high school, rather than elementary
school.
5ELLs in the Classroom Trends (pg 11)
- There are higher numbers of CLD students whose
first languages are not English than there used
to be. - Over 66 of CLD students whose first language is
not English come from Spanish-speaking home. - The number of ELLs who come from Asian
language-speaking homes is also increasing.
6ESL Students in NE (Edu 525 6/17/08)
- Nebraska Department of Education (NDE) defines an
ESL eligible ELL student as one who - Has sufficient difficulty in understanding,
speaking, reading or writing the English language
to deny him the opportunity to learn successfully
in classrooms in which the language of
instruction is English. - Was not born in the US or has a native language
other than English - Comes from a home in which a language other than
English is most relied upon for communication - Is an American Indian or Alaskan Native student
and comes from an environment in which a language
other than English has had a significant impact
on his level of English language proficiency.
7High Stakes Testing in the U.S. (Edu 525 6/17/08)
- Student academic proficiency for all students in
America is assessed these days through High
Stakes testing. - ELLs are NOT exempt from these high stakes test,
which are only administered in English, though
ELLs are allowed to take an English-Proficiency
test instead of a Language Arts test during their
FIRST year in an American school.
8Why to have High Stakes Testing
- Encourages teacher accountability
- Because NCLB says so, and your school doesnt get
federal funding/could get into a lot of trouble
if they dont administer the tests and report the
scores on the tests - If tests show that a school is not serving its
students well, NCLB says parents have greater
educational options for their students, like
receiving free tutoring services or sending their
child to a different school. - In theory, the instructional practices that grow
out of high-stakes testing ought to help close
the achievement gap between minority and white
students - Can be used to assess teacher effectiveness, and
be used to determine how to improve classroom
instructional practices.
9Why NOT to have High-Stakes Testing (pg 13/Edu
525 6/16/08)
- They can be really stressful for students!
- They encourage teachers to teach to the test,
focusing on low-level, basic skills, with lots of
redundancy of instruction, rather than letting
teachers focus on teaching content-standards
and/or higher-level thinking skills - They are easy for ELL students to fail, pushing
them out of the educational system and making the
learning process feel hopeless and pointless. - Testing is really expensive for schools, and many
instructional days are lost to test prep and
administration - The extreme monetary incentives and penalties
motivates schools and districts to manipulate
test results. - Because each state/district makes its own test,
standards of scoring are not uniform. So,
sometimes students arent learning more, they are
just being assessed differently. - If schools fail to make Adequate Yearly Progress
(AYP) for two years in a row, funding is removed
from poor performing schools, then standards will
be lowered. Nobody wins neither students nor
educators..
10High Stakes Tests are usually scored as
- Norm-Referenced
- or
- Criterion-Referenced
11Norm-Referenced Tests
- The percentile score compares a students raw
score to the raw scores of all the other students
who took the test that year, in that
district/state/the country. A student scores in a
certain percentile based on the average raw test
scores. (ex. If you are in the 78th percentile,
you probably did not get 78 of the questions
right, but rather, you scored better than 78 of
all the students who took the test).
12Criterion-References Tests
- The score indicates how much a student knows on
a subject. The students should be given the test
as a pre-test, to determine what they already
know, and as a post-test, to determine what they
learned through the teachers instruction. The
test should reflect content-standards for the
subject being tested.
13Classroom- Based Assessments can be
- Selected Response multi-choice and matching
tests. Also referred to as forced-choice
format. - or,
- 2)Constructed Response essay, fill-in-the-blank,
and every form of authentic assessment.
14Classification of Assessments
- 1) Standardized Assessments Everything about
the test is the same for every student who takes
the test directions, setting, content, format,
scoring, etc. - 2) Authentic Assessments (a.k.a. Alternative
Assessments There is variation in testing
procedures. Numerous examples giving in slides
that follow.
15What is an assessment of Academic Achievement?
- An assessment that measures the students
conceptual skills and knowledge of the core
content area standards and objectives. - Students need a chance to learn the material,
then demonstrate that they know the material
163 Qualities of a Good Assessment
- 1) Reliability Consistency. If 2 different tests
of the same type were be given to the same group
of students, they would get the same results. - 2) Validity the test is actually assessing what
you mean it to be assessing (ex. This Civil War
social studies test is assessing my students on
what they know about the Civil War, not on what
they know about WWII, nor on whether they can
write a good 5-paragraph essay.) - 3) Fairness There is no cultural, gender,
language, etc. bias in the test.
17What is Cultural Bias?
- When a test does not take a students culture or
language background into account, making a
question unfair. It can lead to incorrect answers
because the questions are invalidly assessing on
knowledge that is not taught in the curriculum. - Examples Questions that
- require you to already know how many people are
on a baseball team. (ex. If two baseball players
are home sick, how many players are in the
dugout?) - expect you to recognize English literary
references.( ex. Multiply the number of gables on
the house in the book by Hawthorn by the number
following the name Henry in the Shakespeare
play involving the battle of St. Crispins Day.) - assume a knowledge of Christian practices. (ex.
What day of the week will it be two days after
Jim goes to church?)
18Assessment Alignment
- Assessments are aligned when they match
- 1) teacher training (ex. the teacher knows how
to properly administer and grade the test) - 2) content-standards for the class (ex. It is a
chemistry class. You are testing them on their
understanding of covalent bonds, not on their
understanding of bonds in Romeo and Juliet.) - 3) Classroom curriculum (ex. You do not spend the
unit teaching them about Spanish preterit verbs,
then test them on the pluscuamperfecto).
19Why Use Authentic Assessments?
- Sometimes standardized and formal tests are
inadequate means to assess ELLs English
Proficiency and growth. These alternative
assessment methods let you identify and build on
students strengths, such as their language
proficiency, prior experience, and pre-existing
academic knowledge. - These alternative assessment methods are an
accommodation for ELLs, so that their language
proficiency is not a stumbling block to their
demonstrating their actual knowledge on a
subject. - A problem Scoring is often subjective, and
sometimes difficult to quantify
20Types of Authentic Assessment
- Performance-based
- Portfolio
- Self-Assessment/ Peer-Assessment
- Interview-based
- Play-based
- Cooperative-group
- Dialogue Journal
- Scaffolded Essay
21Performance-based (pg. 27)/Edu 525
- Knowledge is constructed through learning, so you
assess as the students discover knowledge for
themselves. (ex. Assess the students process of
carrying out a science experiment.) -
22Portfolio (pg 29)/Edu 525
- Samples of student work are collected, to show
both the best of the students work, and the
progression of the students improvement over the
course. Shows how product matches criteria and
objectives.
23Self-/Peer-Assessment (pg. 32-33)/Edu 525
- Students use a grading rubric to assess their own
and their peers work. Students, on their own,
learn to identify the traits of good work.
24Interview-based (pg 34)/ Edu 525
- Teachers can assess students background
knowledge and skills by directly interviewing
them or giving them questionnaires.
25Play-based (pg 37)/Edu 525
- Role-playing and literacy-rich play-settings (ex.
Restaurant, where there are menus and someone
takes orders, or home with newspapers to read).
26Cooperative Group (pg 38)/Edu 525
- Students work in teams, and are assessed on their
group work skills and their group-produced final
product.
27Dialogue Journal (pg 40)/Edu 525
- Students write, and the teacher writes back,
writing correctly formed sentences and words that
the student had made errors with in the previous
journal entry.
28Scaffolded Essay (pg 41)/Edu 525
- Rather than have a student write an essay on a
topic from scratch, the teacher provides a basic
outline and/or cloze sentences for the student to
fill in.
29Informal vs. Formal Assessment
- Formal Assessment Usually a summative assessment
at the end of a unit, used to attain a summary of
what the student has learned. - Informal Assessment A students daily work,
showing the formation of their knowledge
throughout the learning process during the unit.
30Acculturation vs. Enculturation
- Enculturation Becoming a part of the culture you
are born into. This is an unavoidable, natural
process. - Acculturation The process of entering into a
culture different from the one you were born and
raised into.
31Acculturation is NOT Fun
- The U-Curve Hypothesis explains the Acculturation
process as starting up, dipping down, then
coming up again (like an upper case letter U). - The Adoption/Adaptation Hypothesis is another
explanation of the process, which is possibly
better able to explain a long-term acculturation
process.
32U-Hypothesis of Acculturation (pg 58)
- 1) Honeymoon You feel novelty in the unfamiliar
- 2) Hostility You get angry and frustrated at
constant misinterpretations of the culture. - 3) Humor You see the humor of cross-cultural
experiences, from both sides. - 4) Home You feel at home in your old and new
culture
33Adoption/Adaptation Hypothesis (pg. 83-84)
- Acculturation is a very long 4-stage process
- Euphoria You are excited and curious about the
new culture - Culture Shock You become frustrated with the
new culture and may suffer depression. - Anomie You begin to get a sense of yourself in
the new culture, while losing a sense of yourself
in your home culture. You feel completely
estranged/in a cultural no mans land. (This
period can last a life-time if the socialization
process is overall a negative one, such as
entering a society that is prejudiced against
you). - Adoption/Adaptation You may assimilate (adopt
the new culture in the place of your old one
which can be problematic if your parents/family
still live in the old culture, as well as give
you life-long identity issues), or integrate
(function equally well in your old and new
cultures).
34My Assessment Philosophy
- The culture shock and acculturation processes
that CLD students and ELLs go through can cause
them immense physical and psychological stress.
Between language barriers, affective filters, and
even biological adaptation factors, there are any
number of reasons that CLD students or ELLs
perform poorly on traditional, standardized,
English-only tests, and are unable to show their
actually capabilities on such tests.
Standardized tests can be useful tools for
assessing students progress and determining how
to modify and enhance my instruction. I am sure I
will use standardized tests in my classroom at
times, as well as give my students the skills
they need to succeed on NCLB-driven tests.
However, because of all the unique needs of my
ELLs and CLD students, I am sure I will sometimes
provide them with authentic assessments as
opportunities for them to show me what they are
capable of, outside of the strict confines of
traditional essay or forced-choice format tests.
35References
- Herrera, S.G., Murry, K.G., Cabral, R.M.
(2007).Assessment Accommodations for Classroom
Teachers of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse
Students. Boston Pearson Education, Inc. - Edu 525 ESL Assessment, Summer 2008, College of
St. Mary, class slides