Title: Changing Tests for Teachers: English Language School-Based Assessment in Hong Kong
1Changing Tests for Teachers English Language
School-Based Assessment in Hong Kong
University of Hong Kong Faculty of Education
Inaugural Seminar Series English Language
School-Based Assessment Integrating Theory and
Practice, Dec 19th 2005
- Chris Davison
- Faculty of Education, University of Hong Kong
2Curriculum and assessment reform in Hong Kong
- The Hong Kong Examinations and Assessment
Authority (HKEAA) has recently moved from
norm-referenced to standards-referenced
assessment, including the incorporation of a
substantial school-based summative oral
assessment component into the compulsory English
language subject in the Hong Kong Certificate of
Education Examination (HKCEE).
3Curriculum and assessment reform in Hong Kong
- The initiative aims
- to align assessment more closely with current
English Language teaching syllabus (Curriculum
Development Council, 1999) and the new
outcomes-based Senior Secondary curriculum. - to assess learners achievement in areas not
easily assessed by public examinations, in
particular speaking and extensive reading. - enhance student self-evaluation and life-long
learning.
4The SBA initiative
- Starting in S.4, teachers assess their own
students oral English language competencies
through a range of authentic classroom-embedded
activities over 2 years. - Initiative developed by a team of researchers at
the Faculty of Education, University of Hong
Kong, in collaboration with HKEAA. - Part of an evolving but coherent and systematic
programme of research and evaluation,
professional development and system-wide support
5The SBA initiative
- SBA is integrated into the teaching and learning
process, with teachers involved at all stages of
the assessment cycle - ? planning the assessment programme
- ? identifying and developing appropriate
assessment tasks - ? overseeing the assessment process
- ? making final judgments
6The SBA initiative
- But previous studies have found
- Changes to summative assessment did not
automatically lead to improvement in learning
(Andrews 1994 Cheng 1998 Andrews, Fullilove
Wong 2002). - Assessment innovation was severely constrained by
traditional school culture and by teacher,
parental and student expectations (Cheung Ng
2000 Carless 2001 Adamson Davison 2003). - Wide variation in teachers interpretations of
student performance and of their role in the
assessment process (Yung 2001).
7The SBA content and structure
- Aims
- Content
- Structure
- Assessment criteria
- Making judgments
- Standardization
- Safeguards
8 SBA as research
- The SBA initiative has stimulated multi-level and
multi-purpose research efforts from a growing
research team with more than 12 interrelated
research projects now underway, or under review. - In addition, the research efforts have attracted
the interest of a growing number of MPhil and PhD
students, as well as the attention of the
international assessment and English language
education research community. -
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9 SBA as research
- The particular characteristics of this research
that makes it so interesting - its significance to the educational community
- its high-impact and visibility
- its concern to address both fundamental
theoretical problems in language assessment
(basic research) and the needs of school
communities (applied research) - its action-oriented collaborative approach
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10 SBA as research
- Many concerns and issues about SBA have been
systematically gathered from key stakeholder
groups during the process of SBA development,
implementation and evaluation. - Data was gathered over a year via questionnaires,
individual and focus interviews, classroom
observation and stimulated recall, and public
briefing sessions as well as from the trialling
of the tasks and assessment processes, and the
training workshops, in total involving more than
1800 teachers and over 600 schools. -
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11SBA as research
- Adapting Brindleys (1995) taxonomy, these
- concerns and issues can be divided into three
- types
- Sociocultural (political)
- Theoretical (technical)
- Practical
12Socio-cultural issues
- Still a traditional testing culture in Hong Kong
- Assessment practices are still primarily oriented
towards providing data to select students for
education or employment (Biggs 1995). - External exam results are still the dominant way
schools, students and teachers are evaluated and
held accountable. - Exam preparation is the traditional role of
assessment in the senior secondary classroom (cf.
classroom-based assessment).
13Socio-cultural issues
- Traditional cultural practices exemplified in a
study of writing assessment in senior secondary
English (Davison Tang, 2003) - Many teachers reported they cannot assess,
only mark. They feel unable to make a
difference in teaching and learning, to respond
to individual needs, because of community
expectations of convergence and commonality.
Teachers feel their assessment process are
expected to change, without fundamental purposes
being explicitly challenged. Such role conflict
results in increasing stress and a decline in
perceived teacher expertise.
14Socio-cultural issues
- However, the official adoption of the UK
Assessment Reform Groups (1998) distinction
between assessment for learning, and assessment
of learning has stimulated the beginnings of a
major paradigm shift - Hong Kong schools are moving from a culture of
testing to a learning and assessment culture
(Hamp- Lyons 1999 in press).
15Socio-cultural issues
- Some teachers in the SBA study perceived cultural
differences as a major stumbling block to
assessment reform - I feel it takes time because the culture. The
education culture in Hong Kong is different from
other western countries and the students may not
used to that kind of assessment. They like to do
exam paper, they think they have something to
learn.
16Socio-cultural issues
- Another teacher newly returned from overseas,
commented - Actually I was so surprised that ... How slow
we Hong Kong people are in terms of education
because I remembered when I was in Canada, we
never ... You would never be graded on just one
exam. Its quite like what we are trying to do
actually, I believe that (assessment for
learning) has been practised in those places for
years and I was actually surprised nobody did
anything (here) I am totally for assessment for
learning.
17Socio-cultural issues
- Research shows need for much more understanding,
even at the system level, of - the dual role of the teacher as facilitator and
assessor - the concept of a student being assessed against
criteria (rather than other students) - the need for teacher consultation and interaction
as part of the standardization process.
18Socio-cultural issues
- The schools which were already doing extensive
reading and whose students engaged in oral group
work and individual presentations on a regular
basis found it the easiest to integrate the
assessment tasks into their existing practice - I just briefly tell the students about the task
because it is in mid May, so they were quite busy
that moment. So I asked them just make use of
what they have been doing, say they just, they
can just took from ERS report and work on it, say
prepare a better review so that they can just
have their presentation based on the review and I
told them
19 Socio-cultural issues
- Thats what I did at the very beginning. Later
on, I, I met them some days later, and I asked
them to show me the book review they had written
and I took a look at it and I found that there
werent any major problems in it. So I just
returned them the review and they started to
prepare those tasks and later on, just right
before they did the presentation, I helped them
with the vocabulary and the names because they
didnt know how to pronounce them. So I just
helped them pronounce them correctly (but) I
gave them more guidance according to the SBA
documents because the five questions listed
there (see Appendix II) suggested some sort of
high order thinking skills So I try to scaffold
them to think in that way.
20Socio-cultural issues
- Some teachers took longer to come to grips with
the principles involved in SBA, and their
implications for teaching and learning as well as
for assessment practice - For students of higher forms, the time (8 min)
is quite limited. They cant have enough time to
introduce their books and ask each other
questions. - but no time limits actually prescribed in SBA.
21Socio-cultural issues
- Fairness was and is - a major concern.
- Fairness is fundamentally a sociocultural, rather
than a technical, issue, a justice that goes
beyond acting in agreed upon ways and seeks to
look at justice of the arrangements leading up to
and resulting from those actions. (Stobart,
2005, p. 1). - Fair assessment cannot be considered in
isolation from both the curriculum and the
educational opportunities of the students some
similarities to the more traditional notion of
fairness embodied in the classical examinations
for the Chinese civil servicethe concept that
conditions should be consciously created to make
opportunities open to all (Hamp-Lyons, 2005).
22Socio-cultural issues
Fairness in the current HKU examination system Fairness in the SBA component
Treat all students equally (vs. equitably) Treat each student individually (i.e. unequally)
Same task, same input, same conditions, same length of time for all Different arrangements for different students according to their language proficiency
Major aim To give a consistent grade to each student in an invariable settings for selection purposes Major aim To provide opportunity for all students to demonstrate their best. Learning culture for all ? sense of achievement.
23Socio-cultural issues
- Preliminary findings suggest that these different
approaches to fairness can be reconciled to some
extent by providing teachers with opportunity to
tailor classroom-based assessments to the needs
of their students, according to commonly-agreed
processes, outcomes and standards, with teacher
assumptions about students and their oral
language levels being made explicit through
collaborative sharing and discussion with other
teachers.
24Theoretical issues
- At the theoretical level concerns with SBA
revolve around the understanding and
interpretation of traditional concepts such as
reliability, validity and authenticity, eg. - The students will memorize everything.
- Some teachers will tell students the task ahead
of time - Teachers will favour their best students.
- Panel chairs will make all teacher agree with
them. - Schools will make up results.
- Tutorial schools will coach students.
- The HKEAA should take up all the scripts to
check the accuracy of the marks.
25Theoretical issues
- The traditional positivist position on
language testing, with the tendency to map the
standard psychometric criteria of reliability and
validity onto the classroom assessment
procedures, has been called into question, and
the scope of validity has been significantly
broadened (Chapelle 1999 Lynch 2001, 2003
McNamara 2001) and taken further by a number of
researchers. (Rea-Dickins, in press)
26Theoretical issues
- Defining characteristics of school-based
assessment (Stiggins Conklin 1992 Black
Wiliam 1998 Brookhart 2003) - Teacher-mediated
- Co-constructed and dialogic
- Context-dependent
- Multiple and varied
- Dynamic and evolving
27Theoretical issues
- Such an approach can be seen as constructive
and enabling because of its focus on assessing
the process of learning, its attempt to elicit
elaborated performance, and its emphasis on
collaborative activity - Rea-Dickins (in press)
28Theoretical issues
- However, if there is no reinterpretation of
traditional conceptualizations of reliability and
validity, SBA may be reduced to - a series of summative mini-achievement tests
external to the teaching and learning programme. - the assessment of rehearsed monologues or
dialogues with little or no opportunity for
authentic language use. - competition rather than collaboration
29Theoretical issues
- Cf. Clapham (2000, p. 21)
- Traditional test criteria do apply to
alternative assessment - A problem with methods of alternative
assessment, however, lies with their validity and
reliability Tasks are often not tried out to see
whether they produce the desired linguistic
information marking criteria are not
investigated to see whether they work and
raters are often not trained to give consistent
marks.
30Theoretical issues
- Preliminary findings suggest
- Potentially much greater validity with SBA than
external oral paper - - More natural and authentic tasks
- - Students have a genuine reason to communicate
as have read different texts - - Students in comfortable, familiar
environment-- Class teacher already familiar with
the range of student performance, can ask
questions to ensure the text is students own
work? little possibility of cheating
31Theoretical issues
- Potentially much greater reliability with SBA
than external oral paper - - A series of assessments (instead of one) by a
teacher who is familiar with the students - - Exemplars of student performances can
provide a strong basis for discussing and
internalizing the set standards. - - Multiple opportunities for assessor reflection
and standardization. - - Disagreement between teachers the key to
establishing trust (and trustworthiness).
32Theoretical issues
- But initially lots of misconceptions
- Superficial tasks
- A lot of over-rehearsal and memorization
- Use of buzzers and rigid timelines
- Over-reliance on scripts and formula
- An emphasis on performance and recording
- Overbearing or stressed teachers
- Unhappy students
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33Practical issues
- Not surprisingly, many practical concerns
- - Access to appropriate assessment and extensive
reading) resources - - Access to activities and techniques,
models/resources - - Access to technical resources/expertise
- - Lack of recognition/support at the
school-level - - Concerns about student and parental
expectations - - (In)adequacy of training
- - Lack of time
- - Competing priorities
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34Practical issues
- Teachers also expressed a need to understand much
better the underlying assumptions of SBA, how to
modify their teaching and learning, and how to
set up effective assessment tasks - Many teachers have an urgent need to view
others practices and share experiences ... We
can film the good lessons for teachers and
analyze the lessons. We (need to) focus on
teaching instead of assessment only.
35Practical issues
- ? More training will be provided to all teachers
teaching S4 English between January and April so
that they can be supported during the whole of
the assessment period in second semester. SBA
handbook, introductory DVD and booklet are
available, on-line and face to face support.
36Practical issues
- Preliminary findings suggest
- Much extra time and effort required during the
first year(s) of implementation as SBA is still
new to both teachers and students, but once SBA a
routine part of classroom activities, should be
no significant increase in student/teacher
workload? - SBA changes nature of what is done rather than
how much is done the key is to integrate
assessment, teaching and learning?
37Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- Despite many concerns, the attitudes towards SBA
by teachers, students and school communities are
generally very positive - Personally, I enjoyed this trialing experience.
I learnt how to judge the students through this
activity. Moreover, my students tried to do the
presentation based on the guiding questions given
to them. Students found this presentation quite
interesting and motivating. They learnt how to
speak confidently and bravely during this
assessment activity. They found this presentation
rewarding since they can learn not only from the
book but also through their actual participating
experience.
38Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- Those teachers involved now much more aware of
values and principles underlying SBA, and options
now available to them - After my students had finished the
presentation, I give them feedback and try to
improve their performance and I was really
amazed by the response I thought that one of my
students actually is not very good in English,
but after the presentation she tried very hard to
do it again and again. Feedback really works and
I found that my students have improved a lot.
39Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- Teachers commented on increase in student
confidence and positive effect of assessment
activity on other language skills - M I think my student Sandy, just the one, just
videotaped. She has great improvement She thinks
that is useful, very useful and she told me that
it also helps her reading. I think the student
can really improve a lot after this trialing. - C Well, my student has shown a great
improvement in terms of confidence and English
proficiency. They like talking to each other in
English and they are not being afraid of being
videotaped.
40Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- AYeah, they start, they start reading English
books as well. - S I think is just like what you said, is very
good training for confidence and the students
actually articulate what they read and they
found reading very useful, purposeful, that is
something that you can share with someone, is
not something just happening in your inner self.
So I think the one that I trained out of the two,
one girl and she does quite well even in her
writing. So she did well in this writing exam.
Im not sure if it is the effect of that training
experience (but) it seems that she gained some
confidence during this period of time.
41Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- Students also commented favorably on the
assessment activities - T What do you think about the assessment task
you did in the presentation task 5? - S1 It was quite interesting that we need to
think about what the character needs. We can buy
a gift. - S2 I just think its easy to handle it.
- T Why?
- S2 Its quite interesting to think for a gift
to the character. - T When you are thinking of a gift is it
difficult?
42Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- S2 I dont think so because I can think of
many, many gifts to solve the problem. - T Did you enjoy working with your partners?
- S2 Yes. I did because my partners are all my
best friends. We didnt have any gaps so we did
the project perfect. - T What about you?
- S3 I also very enjoy doing the task with my
friends as they know me very much. When I dont
know what can I say they will help me to continue
the conversation. - S4 With the partner I wont feel nervous.
43Positive impact on teachers, learners and schools
- Students can comment on own development and
receive constructive feedback immediately after
assessment, hence improving learning. - Students encouraged to work consistently.
- Teachers and students become partners in the
assessment process - Collaboration and sharing of expertise take place
within and across schools. - Teachers build knowledge and skills in
alternative assessment, readily transferable to
other areas of English language curriculum, and
beyond.
44Conclusions
- The SBA initiative, is a major educational
reform, entailing significant changes in school
culture and structures as well as in pedagogic
expectations among students, teachers,
administrators, parents and the wider community. - The SBA initiative requires the development of
content- and context-appropriate assessment
activities, instruments and procedures which are
explicitly linked to high-quality teaching and
learning.
45Conclusions
- The SBA initiative requires English language
teachers who are not only confident and skilled
at making highly-contextualised, consistent and
trustworthy assessment decisions, but also
effective at involving students in the assessment
process. - The SBA initiative requires high levels of
teacher collaboration, leadership and support
within and across schools. - SO much research and (informed) practice is
needed to help make this initiative a success.
46Assessment for learning in Hong Kong
- http//cd.emb.gov.hk/basic_guide/BEGuideeng0821/ch
apter05.html - Based on the beliefs that every student is
unique and possesses the ability to learn, and
that we should develop their multiple
intelligences and potentials there should be a
change in assessment practices and schools should
put more emphasis on 'Assessment for Learning' as
an integral part of the learning, teaching and
assessment cycle
47- In other words, teachers should use
assessments (e.g. as simple as effective verbal
questioning, observation of student behaviour)
and provide immediate feedback to enhance student
learning in everyday classroom lessons. The focus
is on why they do not learn well and how to help
them to improve rather than just to use
assessments to find out what knowledge students
have learned
48Selected References
- Adamson, B. Davison, C. Innovation in English
language teaching in Hong Kong primary schools
One step forwards, two steps sideways. Prospect,
18 (1), 27-41. - Andrews, S. 1994. The washback effect of
examinations Its impact upon curriculum
innovation in English language teaching.
Curriculum Forum, 4 Carless, D., (2005).
Prospects for the implementation of assessment
for learning. Assessment in Education, 12(1),
39-54. - Chapelle, C. (1999). Validity in language
assessment. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics,
19, 254-272. - Cheng, L.Y. 1998. Does washback influence
teaching? Implications for Hong Kong. Language
and Education 11 (1), 38-54.
49Selected References
- Davison, C. Tang, R. (2003, March). Assessing
in the swamp Formative assessment in Hong Kong
secondary school English. Paper presented at the
American Association for Applied Linguistics,
Arlington, VA, USA. - Hamp-Lyons, L. (in press). The impact of
testing practices on teaching Ideologies and
alternatives. Classroom-based assessment
Possibilities and pitfalls. In Cummins, J.
Davison, C. (Eds) The International Handbook of
English language teaching, (Vol. 1), Norwell, MA
Springer. - Lynch, B. (2003). Language assessment and
programme evaluation. Edinburgh Edinburgh
University Press. - McNamara, T. (2001). Language assessment as
social practice challenges for research.
Language Testing, 18(4), 333-349. - Rea-Dickins, P. (in press). Classroom-based
assessment Possibilities and pitfalls. In
Cummins, J. Davison, C. (Eds) The International
Handbook of English language teaching, (Vol. 1),
Norwell, MA Springer. - SBA Consultancy Team (2005). 2007 HKCE English
examination Introduction to the school based
assessment component. Hong Kong HKEAA.