March 2017
ADVERTISEMENT
Giving students choices in their learning is a motivating factor (Renandya, 2014), and tapping into students’ creative side, thereby providing choices, doesn’t have to end with classroom activities—it can be extended to formal assessment as well. One way of doing this is by using alternative assessments which, according to Brown and Hudson (1998), are performances or creations of something that blend real-world simulation and the essence of familiar classroom activities; their focus is on processes and products.
Because alternative assessments can reveal strengths and weaknesses of students’ language ability just like (or arguably better than) traditional tests (Renandya, 2014), this article outlines the rationale and procedure for designing an alternative vocabulary assessment that prompts students to use vocabulary creatively in writing while also incorporating collaborative learning.
The tricky part about assessment is figuring out exactly which aspects of the language to evaluate and how to isolate those specific aspects, but teachers know that language skills generally cannot be isolated and that when assessing writing, for instance, the student also employs reading or listening skills if, respectively, a written or verbal prompt is given. To determine how to assess vocabulary, it is helpful to answer this essential question: “What does it mean to know a word?” Folse (2004) outlined the following as features of word knowledge:
We would add to that list receptive and productive ability of the target vocabulary—being able to recognize the word within a listening and reading context and being able to apply the word within a speaking and writing context.
Creating the Assessment
For our particular low-intermediate level English students, our vocabulary goals focused primarily on core meaning, part of speech, and receptive and productive ability rather than grammar or form of the target vocabulary. In order to assess exactly these aspects of vocabulary knowledge, we designed an alternative assessment that directs students to work collaboratively to write a brief, one-paragraph descriptive response to a prompt using target vocabulary. The writing prompt is related to the content of the current course unit and creates a meaningful context for the words instead of providing isolated instances in irrelevant contexts.
Students speak English in groups of two or three in order to produce one written response, and group members are chosen by the teacher, by the students, or based on proximity in the classroom, and this choice rotates throughout the semester. Anecdotally speaking, we have found that students prefer teacher-selected groups because it reduces feelings of exclusion or embarrassment. The writing prompts are usually printed on large paper, and multiple copies are given to each group in order to reduce visibility barriers. The prompt itself is peppered with related images to stimulate thinking and to “bring the outside world into the classroom in a vividly concrete way” (Raimes, 1983, p. 27).
Because this assessment is challenging and requires collaboration, groups usually finish within 50 minutes of a 60-minute class. Students are allowed to use dictionaries to define words other than the target vocabulary—of course, this requires a certain degree of trust between student and teacher.
We have found five key parameters to integrate in the writing prompt:
Providing students with an imaginary role or purpose for the assessment employs the communicative approach and encourages students to “behave like writers in real life and to ask themselves…crucial questions about purpose and audience” (Raimes, 1983, p. 8).
Sample Prompt and Student Responses
The following is a sample writing prompt incorporating the above five parameters followed by two real group responses:
“Take a look at the map of the town. Your job is to write one paragraph advertising this town to tourists. Use at least seven words from the list of Unit 4 vocabulary words. Also, don't forget to give the town a name!”
Student responses (with target vocabulary underlined); all errors are that of the students:
In the first sample response, it is easy to determine that students have understood the meaning of the word lively in the sentence “This town is lively because there are many people and shops” while it is unclear from the sentence “This town is lively” in the second sample response. For this type of assessment, it is important to teach students how to write sentences that include context clues about the target vocabulary.
Other Sample Prompts
Conclusion
Why use collaborative writing to assess vocabulary knowledge? The answer, argued Swain (1985), is that output is a source of vocabulary learning because it requires attention to vocabulary aspects not needed during listening and reading (as cited in Nation, 2003). Further, learners negotiate meaning, thereby providing comprehensible input on a more individual basis. This assessment activity continues the learning process and accentuates positive assessment washback.
References
Brown, J. D., & Hudson, T. (1998). The alternatives in language assessment. TESOL Quarterly, 32, 653–675.
Folse, K. (2004). Vocabulary myths: Applying second language research to classroom teaching. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
Nation, P. (2003). Vocabulary. In D. Nunan (Ed.), Practical English language teaching (pp. 129–152). New York, NY: McGraw Hill.
Raimes, A. (1983). Techniques in teaching writing. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Renandya, W. (2014). Motivation in the language classroom. Alexandria, VA: TESOL Press.
Download this article (PDF) |
Jessica Sadler earned her MA in TESOL from University of Maryland Baltimore County. She has taught English literature, EAP, and ESL/EFL in the United States, Thailand, and Japan, and she is a former recipient of the English Teaching Assistantship Fulbright Grant. She has presented education and English literature research at international and regional conferences.
Yulinda Kusumawati is a research assistant at Tokyo International University where she is currently completing an undergraduate degree in international relations. She also provides assistance to students in the English Plaza at Tokyo International University’s Global Teaching Institute.
![]() |
Next Article![]() |
Language Testing Specialist (Grades 1-5); Center for Applied Linguistics; Washington, DC, USA
Academic Director; INTO University of South Florida; Tampa, Florida
To browse all of TESOL's job postings, check out the TESOL Career Center.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT