Writing English Language Tests (MS 710)
Writing English Language Tests (MS 710)
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Publisher | Chưa rõ |
---|---|
Accessible book producer | Sao Mai Center for the Blind |
Published year | 1989 |
Coppy right | Chưa rõ |
1 Introduction to language testing
1.1 Testing and teaching
1.2 Why test?
1.3 What should be tested and to what standard?
1.4 Testing the language skills
Testing language areas
1.6 Language skills and language elements
1.7 Recognition and production
1.8 Problems of sampling
1.9 Avoiding traps for the students
2 Approaches to language testing
2.1 Background
2.2 The essay translation approach
2.3 The structuralist approach
2.4 The integrative approach
2.5 The communicative approach
3 Objective testing
3.1 Subjective and objective testing
Objective tests
3.3 Multiple – choice item: general
3.4 Multiple – choice items: the stem/the correct option/ the distractors
3.5 Writing the test
4 Tests of grammar and usage
4.1 introduction
4.2 Multiple-choice grammar items: item types
4.3 Constructing multople – choice items
4.4 Contructing error recognition multiple choice items
4.5 Constructing rearrangement items
4.6 Constructing completion items
4.7 Constructing tranformation items
4.8 Construcing items involving the changing of words
4.9 Constructing ‘broken sentence’ items
4.10 Constructing pairing and matching items
4.11 Constructing combination and addition items
5 Testing vocabulary
5.1 Selection of items
5.2 Multiple choice items (A)
5.3 Multiple choice items (B)
5.5 Matching items
5.6 More objective items
5.7 Completion items
6 Listening comprehension tests
6.1 General
6.2 Phoneme discrimination tests
6.3 Tests of stress and intonation
6.4 Statements and dialogues
6.5 Testing comprehension through visual materials
6.6 Understanding talks and lectures
7 Oral production tests
7.1 Some difficulties in testing the speaking skills
7.2. Reading aloud
7.3 Conversational exchanges
7.4 Using picture for assessimg oral production
7.5 The oral interview
7.6 Some other techniques for oral examining
8 Testing reading comprehension
8.1 The nature of the reading skills
8.2 Initial stages of reading: matching tests
8.3 Intermediate and advanced stages of reading: matching tests
8.4 True/false reading tests
8.5 Multiple – choice items (A): short texts
8.6 Multiple – choice items (B): longer texts
8.7 Completion items
8.8 Rearrangement items
8.9 Cloze procedure
8.10 Open – ended and miscellaneous items
8.11 Cursory reading
9 Testing the writing skills
9.1 The writing skills
9.2 Testing composition writing
9.3 Setting the composition
9.4 Grading the composition
9.5 Treatment of written errors
9.6 Objective tests: mechanics
9.7 Objective tests style and register
9.8 Controlled writing
10 Criteria and types of tests
10.1 Validity
10.2.Reliability
10.3 Reliability versus validity
Discrimination
10.6 Test instructions to the candidate
10.7 Backwash effects
10.8 Types of test
11 Interpreting test scores
11.1 Frequency distribution
11.2 Measures of cental tendency
11.3 Measures of dispersion
11.4 Item analysis
11.5 Moderating
11.6 Item card and banks