How are
related the terms testing, assessing, and teaching? If we make a survey with
Colombian teachers maybe the majority of them could say that testing is a way
of assessing students, and that it is important in teaching to determine
whether the student passes or fails the course. I´m just guessing the answer because
that is what is commonly said by teachers and, actually, that was what I
thought before starting reading the interesting book “Language Assessment –
Principles and Classroom Practice” by Brown (2000).
As it was
explained in the previous post, there are different kinds of assessment, but it
depends primarily in the teachers to choose the appropriate one for enhance
students learning. The easy way is not the suitable one when we talk about
assessment. Teachers must be active, inquiring, and dynamic in order to create
a better environment for learners. This means assessing them without them
realising it. But, what is the purpose of this?
Testing is,
without have a look of the statistics, the most used way of evaluating students
in Colombian schools. A Test is defined by Brown (2000) as “a method of
measuring a person’s ability, knowledge, or performance in a given domain”. Tests
produce anxiety and fear from some students that only study for the exam and
then forget everything because their objective is to pass it –maybe because we
are got into the bad habit of compete for a grade and not to learn; which is
the main purpose of going to an academic institution–.
When
students think they are not being judged by the teacher, they do not care about
making mistakes and do a better job. If teachers can create a way in which they
assess students while they do not realise it, they will perform freely and the
results could be more accurate when evaluating. Therefore, taking into account
what was said in the previous post and this one, I would say that assessment
should be formal and formative in order to collect information from different
sources –not just by testing– and to provide reliable feedback. This will help
you to make better decisions to improve your teaching and, at the same time, it
will enhance your students’ learning process.
However, it
does not mean that testing is bad at all. As Brown (2000) himself said, tests
can bring out the best of students and it will be a good instrument to measure students
ability in a particular domain. After using assessment to improve students
learning you, probably, will want to measure whether your teaching methods were
appropriate for them and have a look of students understanding. That is when
tests are useful for teachers to evaluate not only their students, but
themselves as well. Despite some students suffer from test-phobia, it is
important to evaluate your teaching method in such a way in order to make
decisions from the results obtained.
Now, the
discussion will be about how to assess and evaluate students in terms of
language skills: reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Should we assess
and evaluate them separately? Or should we integrate all of them?