Abstract

This study aims to investigate the perceptions and self-reported practices of Moroccan EFL public high school teachers towards traditional and alternative assessment. The data were collected from 51 teachers in Northern Morocco using a self-developed online questionnaire. The questionnaire items about teachers’ perceptions and self-reported practices were valid and both their data and sampling were acceptable for factor analysis of three subscales (traditional assessment, alternative assessment related with assessment as learning, and assessment for learning), and all scales proved to be reliable. Based on the three research questions, the study yielded the following results: (1) Teachers perceived the objectives of alternative assessment to be significantly more important than those of traditional assessment. (2) Based on their self-reported practices, teachers mainly used traditional assessment methods more often than alternative assessment methods associated with assessment as and for learning. (3) When comparing teachers’ perceptions with their self-reported practices, we found that teachers’ perceptions regarding traditional assessment matched their practices; while the majority of teachers admitted that they found alternative assessment important even though they did not often use it in order to support students to be able to reflect on their own learning or to enhance their performance in the learning process. Thus, these findings are significant for researchers, teachers, and educators to help them reconsider their perceptions of alternative assessment and how they should be enacted in practice with the aim of resolving the mismatches found in this study.

Highlights

  • Assessment has been one of the biggest areas of interest for scholars and practitioners in a multitude of fields of language teaching and learning

  • Significant differences (p < .05) in pairs were found only between the means of the first two and the last two statements belonging to this group, most of which are items describing the aims related to assessment as learning (AaL)

  • As found in previous studies (e.g., Ghaicha & Omarkaly, 2018; Phongsirikul, 2018), our study revealed that most teachers admitted that they found alternative assessment (AA) important even though they did not often use it to either have students reflect on their own learning and support AaL or enhance their performance in the learning process and promote assessment for learning (AfL)

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Summary

Introduction

Assessment has been one of the biggest areas of interest for scholars and practitioners in a multitude of fields of language teaching and learning. The high-stakes English examinations at the Baccalaureate level in Morocco have been the major criterion used to measure students’ language skills despite the opportunity for English teachers to implement the recommended forms of formative assessment (e.g., portfolio, project, selfand peer-assessment) as prescribed in the English language guidelines (Ministry of National Education, 2007) Owing to such a strict reliance on final examinations, it cannot be claimed that teachers are free to switch from TA to AA, and this has a direct impact on students’ motivation for learning and on teachers’ preparation of instructional materials, known in language testing and assessment research as the washback effect (Ghaicha & Oufela, 2021; Green, 2013).

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