Sunday, 2 December 2012

Integrating Listening and Speaking Skills in Classroom Assessment


Assessing skills is a complex issue especially when it has to do with the receptive skills. Performance of the receptive skills cannot be observed neither during the process, nor during the product unless you have a special device that scan student’s brain in order to show is using his/her receptive competences. For that reason, I think integrating them with a productive skill is necessary to create not only a communicative environment –the appropriate one for learning a foreign language–, but also a pertinent assessment method for measuring listening competence by observing speaking (or writing) actual performance.

Taking into account that it is difficult to assess competence because what you can observe is performance, and that performance does not give us a reliable measure of true competence, we must trust in the teacher’s criterion. Of course, it implies a subjective point of view from the teacher that should make that subjectivity as positive as possible in order to enhance students’ learning process.

To assess oral production, there are several kinds of tasks that can be created according to the type of speaking (imitative, intensive, responsive, interactive, and intensive). Maybe all of the tasks designed to assess those types of speaking are useful at different levels of English learning and that can be integrated with a receptive skill. Let’s talk about listening to complement the previous post. The test-taker listens to a spoken stimulus and has to understand it as much as possible to perform well in oral production.

It sounds interesting but there are many problems that can rise. How to be accurate when assessing listening and speaking if, for instance, a student understands what he/she heard but the shyness as high as to make him make many mistakes when speaking? On the other hand, how can you measure students speaking performance if they do not understand well the spoken stimulus? Probably some students are good at speaking but if they do not understood the spoken stimulus they will not participate because the lack of information about the topic.

Nevertheless, we, as teachers, must to create activities in which students have to use their receptive skills to understand some information provided by spoken (or reading) stimulus and then give their opinions about the topic. Giving them the opportunity to ask for repetition when they cannot understand fully the spoken input, and letting them to work in smalls groups to avoid shyness.

I think discussions are an appropriate activity for measuring students’ actual performance in listening and speaking. The teacher should guide the process, of course, but give students the opportunity of share their thoughts freely and choosing some advanced students as moderators of the discussions. Remember that it is important to triangulate students’ measurements to get a more reliable assessment. So, do not trust only in a final exam that can be affected by students-related reliability factors. It is important not to generate a grade from the activities, but a set of goals that can be related to the micro and macro skills established by Brown (2003).

Let’s have a look of the following video as guidance for creating discussion activities in a classroom. Changing the goals of the activitiy to assess listening and speaking competence, and making some modifications we can create a good exercise for intermediate and advance learners. 


4 comments:

  1. Discussion are very good ways to enhance speaking skill. I would be very careful with the specific aims I'm going to keep in mind to assess the students. They must know what the purpose of the activity is and the objectives in terms of target language.
    Ps: remember we say "opportunity of sharing" instead of "opportunity of share" (lines 29-30).
    "must create" instead of "must to create" (line 24) :) Have a nice day!

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  2. I agreed with Manuel´s comments because sometimes we as teachers don’t have a clear notion of how to evaluate our students in terms of speaking or listening. We just give them some recordings and at the end we hope they have understood everything, they provide a clear or understandable message like if they were machines, but in the real life we must be aware that it is not so easy for them. We as facilitators of knowledge must be aware of the problems or inconvenient that can arise in their process. We should provide suitable activities in which all the abilities are integrated and not just give them activities to fulfill an exam; these activities should be meaningful and with an specific purpose. Language should be treated as a complete meaning-making system, the parts of which function in relational ways.

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  3. First of all I must say that your videos are really, really interesting. Second, I love the part about discussions because it is true what Brown manifested. When you are in a good and well-organized discussion you are feeling the heated atmosphere, you tend to forget that you are being assessed and you only enjoy everything that is happening at the moment; at least that is what happened in my case and I know some people also have this kind of feeling. The important part to highlisght is WEL-ORGANIZED, CLEAR OBJECTIVES AND GOOD DEVELOPMENT in order to do a good assessment.

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  4. Good post about listening and speaking skills it is very useful for students

    ielts listening and speaking skills

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