Abstract

Admission in English-medium universities or institutions of higher education depends on the results obtained by candidates in large-scale proficiency tests including Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) internet-based test (iBT). The structure and administration procedure of the TOEFL iBT speaking test leaves no room for carrying out reciprocal interactions and, consequently, examining applicants’ questioning ability. This study highlights the significance of non-native students’ skills to ask oral English questions in academic contexts as experienced by non-native graduates from English-medium universities and in the view of Iranian TOEFL iBT instructors. Further, the washback of the absence of the skill in the TOEFL iBT test was investigated in speaking preparation classes. Twelve non-native graduates and nineteen Iranian TOEFL iBT instructors participated in the study. They were all interviewed about the significance of oral questioning. The instructors’ views were also sought about the consequences of the disregard of questioning in the test. To triangulate the data, two classes of the instructors were also observed. Classroom observations and interviews were analyzed through content analysis. The results indicated that the participants generally assumed questioning as indispensable in academic interactions. Despite their acknowledgment of its significance, as both the interviews and observations unveiled, the instructors, however, tended not to work on their students’ questioning because of the absence of the skill in the test, the students’ reluctance, limited preparation time, and dependence of their professional reputation on the test results rather than target situation performance. The study further discusses the implications of the findings for the test construct representation and preparation courses.

Highlights

  • Critical decisions have been made about English learners’ and users’ language proficiency based on their performance on high-stakes tests

  • Sayyadi and Rezvani Language Testing in Asia (2021) 11:21 people throughout the world seek to migrate to English-speaking countries (ESC), for instance, to pursue their higher education, and their admission to English-medium universities is highly dependent on their performance on large-scale tests

  • Research questions This study addresses the following questions: 1. What are the perceptions of non-native graduates (NNG) from universities in ESCs about the significance of students’ questioning skill in English-medium higher education settings?

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Summary

Introduction

Critical decisions have been made about English learners’ and users’ language proficiency based on their performance on high-stakes tests. Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) internet-based test (iBT) speaking test has been widely used to assess applicants’ oral communicative capacities and, predict their readiness to manage the language demands of higher education (Brown & Ducasse, 2019) It is a reportedly reliable and valid speaking test (Bridgeman et al, 2012; Chapelle et al, 2008; Enright & Tyson, 2008; Ockey et al, 2015) since “it seeks to simulate typical authentic academic activities, and the scores are said to extrapolate to performance in real-life academic settings” It simulates a life-like situation in which the test-takers are to fulfill the tasks they are going to confront in the target language use situation (TLUS) (Brown & Ducasse, 2019)

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