Exploring ways to provide diagnostic feedback with an ESL placement test: Cognitive diagnostic assessment of L2 reading ability

2014 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ah-Young (Alicia) Kim
AERA Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 233285842110608
Author(s):  
Fang Tang ◽  
Peida Zhan

Assessment for learning emphasizes the importance of feedback to promote learning. To explore whether cognitive diagnostic feedback (CDF) promotes learning and whether it is more effective than traditional feedback in promoting learning, this study conducted a quasi-experiment by utilizing a longitudinal cognitive diagnostic assessment to compare the effect of three feedback modes on promoting learning, including CDF, correct–incorrect response feedback (CIRF), and no feedback. The results provided some evidence for the conclusion that CDF can promote students’ learning and is more effective than CIRF in promoting learning, especially in more challenging areas of knowledge.


2020 ◽  
pp. 026553222094147
Author(s):  
Tugba Elif Toprak ◽  
Abdulvahit Cakir

Cognitive diagnostic assessment (CDA) has been applied to language assessment in a number of studies in which a diagnostic classification model (DCM) was retrofitted to the results of a non-diagnostic assessment. However, the need to apply CDA through utilization of an inductive rather than a retrofitted approach has been a recurrent theme in these studies. Thus, this study aimed to develop a diagnostic L2 reading comprehension test in English to investigate adult examinees’ reading performances in an EFL (English as a Foreign Language) academic setting. The test was based on a cognitive model of L2 reading comprehension and was administered to a sample of 1058 examinees across Turkey. The results were analyzed using log-linear cognitive diagnosis modeling (LCDM), which is one of the general DCM families subsuming other core DCMs. The findings of the study indicated that obtaining fine-grained diagnostic information about examinees’ performances in a given domain would be possible by coupling an adequate understanding of the construct with a CDA framework.


2021 ◽  
pp. 026553222199547
Author(s):  
Shangchao Min ◽  
Lianzhen He

In this study, we present the development of individualized feedback for a large-scale listening assessment by combining standard setting and cognitive diagnostic assessment (CDA) approaches. We used the performance data from 3358 students’ item-level responses to a field test of a national EFL test primarily intended for tertiary-level EFL learners. The results showed that proficiency classifications and subskill mastery classifications were generally of acceptable reliability, and the two kinds of classifications were in alignment with each other at individual and group levels. The outcome of the study is a set of descriptors that describe each test taker’s ability to understand certain level of oral texts and his or her cognitive performance. The current study, by illustrating the feasibility of combining standard setting and CDA approaches to produce individualized feedback, contributes to the enhancement of score reporting and addresses the long-standing criticism that large-scale language assessments fail to provide individualized feedback to link assessment with instruction.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 35-40
Author(s):  
Monika Łodej

Research indicates that L2 reading competence is influenced by L1 reading ability, L2 proficiency, and L2 decoding competence. The present study investigates the significance of two variables, regularity and frequency, in relation to English as a Foreign Language (EFL) reading accuracy in students with a transparent L1. Fifteen 6th grade students in their sixth year of regular instruction in English took part in this study. Their mother tongue is Polish whereas English is their foreign language; thus, their language competence in L1 and L2 differs substantially. The research design followed Glusko (1979), Plaut (1996), and Wang and Koda (2007). There are four sets of real words. Two features of real words are manipulated for regularity and frequency. The study reveals that both conditions of script, regularity and transparency, affect reading accuracy in EFL students. However, the dimension of regularity is a stronger predicator of accuracy than the frequency with which the students encounter a word. From the pedagogical perspective, the collected data supports the use of structured reading instructions in the EFL classroom in order to restrain negative transfer of L1 to L2 reading strategies.


2017 ◽  
Vol 101 (1) ◽  
pp. 163-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miyuki Sasaki ◽  
Yoko Kozaki ◽  
Steven J. Ross

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