A. Background: Arthur Hughes, Testing Language Teachers (New York: Cambridge University Press) 1989.P.101
A. Background: Arthur Hughes, Testing Language Teachers (New York: Cambridge University Press) 1989.P.101
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
A. Background
The assumption is made in this chapter that the objective of teaching spoken
languange is the development of the ability to interest successfully in that languange, and
that this involves comprehension as well as production. It is also assumed that at the
earliest stages of learning formal testing of this ability will not be called for, informal
observation providing any diagnostic information that is needed.
The basic problem in testing oral ability is essentially the same as for testing
writting. We went to set tasks that form a representative sample of the population of oral
tasks that we expect candidates to be able to perform. The tasks should elicit behaviour
which truly represents the candidates ability and which can be scored validly and
reliably.1
1
Arthur Hughes, Testing Language Teachers(new york : cambridge University Press) 1989.P.101.
2
B. Problem Formulation
1. What is assessing speaking?
2. what is the types of the assessment?
3. What the major problem in measuring speaking ability?
4. What the types of oral production test?
5. What the criteria levels of performance?
6. What The Principle Of Teaching Speaking?
7. What the Approches to Assessing Speaking?
8. How Should Assessment InstrumentsBe Selected or Designed?
CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION
2
Dougles, brown. Teaching by principles 3 st ed (san fransisco state university)2007, p. 317.
4
B. Types of Assessment
The term assessment is generally used to refer to all activities teachers use to help
students learn and to gauge student progress. Though notion of the assessment is generally
more complicated than the following categories suggest, assessment is often divided for
the sake of convenience using the following distinctions:
3
Ulfah rustan, language testing,
https://www.academia.edu/29176164/MAKALAH_LANGUAGE_TESTING
4
Ani dwi wahyuni. Theorical review : speaking 2016. P.6
5
In earlier chapters we observed how three of the speech components gramatical structure,
vocabulary and audiotory comprehension are now being tested by reliable and relatively
simple objective techniques. It is highly probable that performance on these tests is
positively related to general ability to converse in a foreign language, although, as will be
explained directly, we still lack very reliable criteria for testing out this assumption.6
General fluency too is fairly easy to assess, at least in gross terms: it usually takes only a
few minutes of listening to determine whether a foreign speaker is able to approximate
the speed and ease with which native speakers of the language typically produce their
utterances. It is only when we come to the crucial matter of pronunciation that we are
confronted with a really serious problem of evaluation. The central reason is the lack of
general agreement on what “good” pronunciation of a second language reallu means: is
comprehensibility to be the sole basis of judgement, or do some listeners decode foreign
speaker equally comprehensible, or do some listeners decode a foreign accent with greater
facility than others? Until we can agree on precisely how speech is to be judged and have
determined that the judgments will have stability, we cannot put much confidence in oral
ratings.
All that we can offer in this chapter, then is a brief summary of the present state of a very
imperfect art. Let us hope that future research may yet transform it into a resionably exact
science.
5
Ulfah rustan, language testing,
https://www.academia.edu/29176164/MAKALAH_LANGUAGE_TESTING
6
David P. Harris. Testing english as a second language (United States Of America : McGraw-Hill Book
Company) 1969. P. 82.
7
statements for each scale point, (2) training the raters for their tasks and (3)
pooling the judgments of at least two raters per interview. These and other
procedures for improving interview testing will be deat with in some detail at the
end of the chapter.
Points to be rated
Points to be rated
Primary stress
Voiced final consonant(s)
Vowel quality
Primary stress
Series intonation
Consonant cluster
Intonation countour
Intonation countour
Stress and pitch
3. Sentence Conversion.
past etc). The voice on the tape gives the sentences one at a time, the examinee
supplying the converion in the pause that follows.
Scoring Procedure : the rater scores each converted sentence on the basis
of whether or nnot it is grammatically acceptable.
4. Sentence Contruction
The voice on the tape asks the examinee to compose sentences appropriate
to specific situations.
The examinee is given time to study each of a series of picture and then
briefly describes what is going on in each scene.
Scoring Procedure : for each picture the rater gives a separate rating of the
examinee’s pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary and fluency, using a 4 or 5 point
scale.
Oral production tests comprising the above, or similar, types of highly
structured speech tasks offer considerable promise as replacements for the
unstructured interview, for they greatly increase both test and scorer consistency.
However it must not be forgotten that the scoring still requires human judgements
and satisfactory reliability can be achieved only if the raters are carefully selected
and are put through rigorous training sessions. Moreover, such tests demend a
great deal of time and care in preparation and usually require mechanical devices
for proper administration. In short: structured speech-sample tests provide no
shortcuts to effective oral testing.
indicating how they pronounce english vowels and consonants and how they
stress words and phrases. Such tests assume (1) that what the foreign learner
“hearts” himself say silently is in fact, what he says aloud and (2) that a
sufficientlybroad range of pronynciation problelms can be tested by this indirect
method to allow us to generalize about a subject’s overal control of the english
sound system. Before discussing these assumptions, let us illustrate characteristic
item types appearing in these paper-and-pencil pronunciation tests.
1. Rhyme words
3.Phrase Stress
1. I know that henry went to the movie, but where did john go?
1 2 3 4 5
2. I’m certain professor brown wants to see you, but he’s in class just
now. 1 2 3 4
12
2. Appropriacy
3. Range
4. Flexibility
13
5. Size
Most contributions may be short, but some evidence of ability to produce
more complex utterances and to develop these into discourse should be
manifested.7
Several key principles should be applied to teaching a speaking class. The first
principle is that, to make sure the teaching takes place in an intended way, it is critical
to create a high level of motivation. That is the key consideration in the determining
the preparedness of learners to communicate. Motivation is the combination of effort
plus desire to achieve the goal of learning plus favorable attitudes toward learning
the language. So effort alone does not signify motivation but it is the desire and the
satisfaction in the activity that count (Nunan, 1999: 233). In order to make students
feel satisfied and have the desire to get involved in the lesson, teachers should do the
following things.
First, teachers use the instinct or experience, depending on the teacher‟s
qualification, to choose interesting topics in order to draw students‟ attention and
make inspiration. Productive skills cannot be develop beyond meaningful contexts.
In addition, unreal contexts cannot help students get involved in such real life
activities as job and academic settings (Green, 1995).
Second, teachers can create interest in the topic by talking about the topic and by
communicating enthusiasm. Teachers can ask if anyone knows about the topic and
can therefore tell the others about it before the activities start. In this way, students
have chances to express their ideas meaningfully and teachers can exploit their
previous knowledge to get them into the lesson. Also, teachers can ask students to
make guesses about the content and to discuss what happens which inspire students
7
Arthur Hugles. Testing for Language Teachers(New York : Cambridge University Press) P. 102.
14
curiosity and their wanting to find out the truth. So they have a reason to attend to the
lesson and to talk for themselves. Additionally, teachers can ask several guiding
questions before the activity and provide necessary information without telling what
students have already known to create stronger motivation. (Harmer, 2002: 253).
Third, motivation is raised in a lesson also by the fact that teachers help to create
a relaxed, non-anxious atmosphere which helps even weak and reluctant students.
This can be done through some activities such as playing guessing games, doing the
rehearsal in small groups before speaking in front of many people, or practicing
speaking under the guidance of the teachers through drills, repetition, mechanical
exercises first (Harmer, 1999: 234,235). In the case students feel fear of mistakes,
teachers can encourage them to take risk and focus on content rather than form.
Fourth, teachers should give appropriate level of difficulty, not too difficult nor too
easy for students may feel bored. And finally, teachers had better employ meaningful
learning with meaningful activities relevant to the real life to get students to talk about
themselves. The second principle is, when students are motivated enough to get
involved in the lesson, teachers should give them the maximum number of
opportunities possible to practice the target language in meaningful contexts and
situations which helps to facilities acquisition for all learners rather than grammatical
explanation or linguistics analysis(Nunan, 1999: 241). It is because learners must
learn to develop the ability to use language to get things done in real life, outside the
classroom.8
8
Nguyen ThiTuyetAnh, The Key Principles for Development of Speaking. IJSELL. Volume 3, Issue 1,
January 2015. P. 50.
15
studentor in a group or classsetting. In either setting, students should feel that they
arecommunicating meaningful content to a real audience. Tasksshould focus on
topics that all students can easily talk about,or, if they do not include such a focus,
students should begiven an opportunity to collect information on the topic.
Both observational and structured approaches use a varietyof rating systems. A
holistic rating captures a general im-pression of the student's performance. A
primary trait scoreassesses the student's ability to achieve a specific communica-
tion purposefor example, to persuade the listener to adopta certain point of view.
Analytic scales capture the student'sperformance on various aspects of
communication, such asdelivery, organization, content, and language. Rating
systemsmay describe varying degrees of competence along a scale ormay indicate
the presence or absence of a characteristic.
A major aspect of any rating system is rater objectivity: Isthe rater applying the
scoring criteria accurately and con-sistently to all students across time? The
reliability of ratersshould be established during their training and checked
duringadministration or scoring of the assessment. If ratings are madeon the spot,
two rates will be required for some administra-tions. If ratings are recorded for
later scoring, double scoringwill often be needed.
CHAPTER III
CLOSING
Conclusion
The basic problem in testing oral ability is essentially the same as for testing writting.
We went to set tasks that form a representative sample of the population of oral tasks that
we expect candidates to be able to perform. The tasks should elicit behaviour which truly
represents the candidates ability and which can be scored validly and reliably.
Many people do not know how to test the quality of questions that tested or will be tested.
It is also not free from their ignorance of what is language testing or language tests.
Language testing needs to be known because it would provide the basis for language
testing. Language testing is the practice and study of Evaluating the proficiency of an
individual in a particular language using Effectively.
99
Mead, Nancy A.; Rubin, Donald L.Assessing Listening and Speaking Skills.Eric
digest(washington)1985.
17
REFFERENCES