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E-grāmata: Assessment of L2 Written English across the MENA Region: A Synthesis of Practice

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Dec-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030532543
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Dec-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030532543

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This edited book brings together contributions from different educational contexts across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) in order to explore how L2 English writing is assessed. Across seven MENA countries, the book covers aspects of practice including: task design and curriculum alignment, test (re)development, rubric design, the subjective decision making that underpins assessing students’ writing and feedback provision, learner performance and how research methods help shed light on initiatives to improve student writing. In such coverage, chapter authors provide concrete evidence of how assessment practice is governed by their unique context, yet also influenced by international standards, trends and resources. This book will be of interest to second language teachers, assessors and programme developers as well as test designers and evaluators.
Test Design and Administration: Connections to Curriculum and Teacher Understandings of Assessment
Introduction
3(10)
Lee McCallum
Christine Coombe
Language Assessment Literacy: Task Analysis in Saudi Universities
13(30)
Mubina Rauf
Lee McCallum
Creational Reverse Engineering: A Project to Enhance English Placement Test Security, Validity, and Reliability
43(26)
Hadeel El Rahal
Huda Dimashkie
Rebuilding the Tower of Babel? Promises and Problems of World Englishes for Writing Assessment
69(24)
Esmat Babaii
Grading and Feedback Connections: Exploring Grading Criteria, Practices and the Provision of Feedback
CAF Profiles of Iranian Writers: What We Learn from Them and Their Limitations
93(20)
Niloufar Shahmirzadi
Exploring the Essay Rating Judgements of English Instructors in the Middle East
113(30)
Analynn P. Bustamante
Selahattin Yilmaz
How Writing Teachers' Beliefs Influence Grading Practices
143(28)
Najoua Ben Hedia
Designing Scoring Rubrics for Different Writing Tasks: The Case of Resume Writing in Iran
171(24)
Mojtaba Mohammadi
Jaber Kamali
Primary Trait Rubric: The Case of MENA Countries
195(30)
Reza Vahdani-Sanavi
Teaching and Assessment Connections: Exploring Learner Performance and the Impact of Instruction
Assessing L2 Argumentation in the UAE Context
225(16)
Jingjing Qin
Integrated Summarizing Read-to-Write Tasks: Patterns of Textual Borrowing and the Role of the Written Genre
241(28)
Katayoun Rezaei
Elaheh Sotoudehnama
Changing Practices to Overcome Writing Difficulties in EFL Courses at University: A Lebanese Case Study
269(28)
Tamara Al Khalili
Integrating Computer- and Teacher-Provided Feedback in an EFL Academic Writing Context
297(28)
Mojtaba Heydari
Fahimeh Marefat
Research on Feedback in EFL Classes in the MENA Region: State of the Art
325(34)
Moez Athimni
Safa Yaakoubi
Hanin Bouzaiene
Using Research Methods to Capture the Nature of Writing Proficiency and its Assessment
Spelling Errors in the Preliminary English B1 Exam: Corpus-Informed Evaluation of Examination Criteria for MENA Contexts
359(34)
Niall Curry
Tony Clark
Learning What Works in Improving Writing: A Meta-Analysis of Technology---Oriented Studies Across Saudi Universities
393(36)
Lee McCallum
Mubina Rauf
Index 429
Lee McCallum is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Exeter, UK.  She has extensive teaching and assessment experience from the Middle East, Europe and China. Her most recent work is a co-authored book entitled Understanding Development and Proficiency in Writing: Quantitative Corpus Linguistics Approaches (forthcoming, 2021).

Christine Coombe is an Associate Professor of General Studies at Dubai Men's College, United Arab Emirates.  Christine is co-editor of multiple projects, including The Cambridge Guide to Research in Language Teaching and Learning (2015). Her forthcoming books are on research questions in language education and professionalism.