Building a validity argument for the Test of English as a Foreign Language

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Bibliographic Information

Building a validity argument for the Test of English as a Foreign Language

edited by Carol A. Chapelle, Mary K. Enright, Joan M. Jamieson

(ESL and applied linguistics professional series)

Routledge, 2008

  • : pbk
  • : hbk

Available at  / 24 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TM) (TOEFL (R)) is used by more universities worldwide than any other test to assess English language proficiency for academic admission and placement decisions, and to guide English language instruction. This landmark volume provides a detailed description and analysis of Educational Testing Service's research and development efforts to develop a major revision of the TOEFL (R) test. The result is a book that serves as a case study of test design drawing upon theory in the complex domain of English language proficiency while attempting to meet standards of educational measurement. Building a Validity Argument for the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TM) is distinctive in its attempt to develop a coherent story of the rationale for a test or its revision, explain the research and development process, and provide the results of the validation process. Through its treatment of one test, it expands on and tests principles and approaches to educational measurement, providing an in-depth, integrated perspective on the overall process of test revision. Moreover, because the conceptual foundation and history are presented alongside the empirical studies and validity argument, these sometimes disparate areas are presented in a way that demonstrates their connections - an approach which represents a departure from, or extension of, conventional materials on test revision. This volume is particularly relevant for professionals and graduate students in educational measurement, applied linguistics, and second language acquisition as well as anyone interested in assessment issues.

Table of Contents

Preface Acknowledgments List of Contributors Chapter 1. Test Score Interpretation and Use Carol A. Chapelle, Mary K. Enright, and Joan M. Jamieson Chapter 2. The Evolution of the TOEFL Carol A. Taylor and Paul Angelis Chapter 3. Frameworks for a New TOEFL Joan M. Jamieson, Daniel Eignor, William Grabe, and Antony John Kunnan Chapter 4 .Prototyping New Assessment Tasks Mary K. Enright, Brent Bridgeman, Daniel Eignor, Robert N. Kantor, Pamela Mollaun, Susan Nissan, Donald E. Powers, and Mary Schedl Chapter 5 Prototyping Measures of Listening, Reading, Speaking, and Writing Mary K. Enright, Brent Bridgeman, Daniel Eignor, Yong-Won Lee, and Donald E. Powers Chapter 6. Prototyping a New Test Kristen Huff, Donald E. Powers, Robert N. Kantor, Pamela Mollaun, Susan Nissan, and Mary Schedl Chapter 7. Finalizing the Test Blueprint Mari Pearlman Chapter 8. A Final Analysis Lin Wang, Daniel Eignor, and Mary K. Enright Chapter 9. The TOEFL Validity Argument Carol A. Chapelle Appendix A. 1995 Working Assumptions That Underlie an Initial TOEFL 2000 Design Framework Appendix B. Summary of 1995 Research Recommendations Appendix C. Timeline of TOEFL Origins and the New TOEFL Project-Key Efforts and Decisions

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