Abstract

BackgroundThe English language school-based assessment (SBA) component of the Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education (HKDSE) Examination is innovative in that the assessment tasks involve assessing English oral language skills in a high-stakes context but they are designed and implemented in the ESL classroom by school teachers in light of a regular reading and viewing program or the elective modules integrated into the school curriculum. While this certainly is a positive move towards better congruence between the teaching, learning, and assessment activities, there has been concern whether the teachers are capable of applying the assessment criteria and standards consistently in spite of going through a variety of standardization meetings and sharing discussions initiated and mandated by the Hong Kong Examination and Assessment Authority (HKEAA). In other words, there has been concern about the extent to which results provided from teachers in different schools are comparable. Also, how may task difficulty be reflected in students’ assessment results across the two SBA task types? It was to provide some research evidence on matters relating to these issues associated with teacher assessment results that the study described here was carried out.MethodsThe study, with the help of Rasch analysis, aims to examine the psychometric qualities of this English language school-based assessment, how students’ assessment results may vary across different schools, and how task difficulty may vary across the two different task types.ResultsThe findings indicated the following: (1) among the three schools involved in this study, two band 2 schools demonstrated similar abilities across all task domains as there were no significant differences in students’ SBA results in all assessment domains between these two band 2 schools. Significant differences were found in some assessment domains between the two band 2 schools and the band 3 school; (2) an obviously more fine-grained pattern of difference in difficulty levels of different assessment domains was observed in students’ assessment results across the two task types in this study than in previous studies.ConclusionsImplications of the results for teacher assessor training and test task development are discussed.

Highlights

  • The English language school-based assessment (SBA) component of the Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education (HKDSE) Examination is innovative in that the assessment tasks involve assessing English oral language skills in a highstakes context but they are designed and implemented in the ESL classroom by school teachers in light of a regular reading and viewing program or the elective modules integrated into the school curriculum

  • The fit statistics is assessed through Infit and Outfit Mean Squares (MnSq)

  • Variation of SBA results across schools in Hong Kong This study showed that students from school C demonstrated significantly poor performance on three assessment domains in the individual presentation task compared with school A and school B

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The English language school-based assessment (SBA) component of the Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education (HKDSE) Examination is innovative in that the assessment tasks involve assessing English oral language skills in a highstakes context but they are designed and implemented in the ESL classroom by school teachers in light of a regular reading and viewing program or the elective modules integrated into the school curriculum While this certainly is a positive move towards better congruence between the teaching, learning, and assessment activities, there has been concern whether the teachers are capable of applying the assessment criteria and standards consistently in spite of going through a variety of standardization meetings and sharing discussions initiated and mandated by the Hong Kong Examination and Assessment Authority (HKEAA). Appropriate to the assessment task Evaluative skill or expertise in having made judgments about students’ efforts on similar tasks in the past A set of attitudes or dispositions towards teaching, as an activity, and towards learners, including their own ability to empathize with students who are learning; their desire to help students develop, improve, and do better; their personal concern for the feedback and veracity of their own judgments; and their patterns in offering help

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call