ITAIS Newsletter - September 2012 (Plain Text Version)

Return to Graphical Version

 

In this issue:
LEADERSHIP UPDATES
•  LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
ARTICLES
•  PRE-ADMISSION ITA ONLINE ORAL INTERVIEW
•  HELPING STUDENTS RECOGNIZE CULTURAL VARIATIONS IN DISCOURSE STYLE
ABOUT THE COMMUNITY
•  WHAT IS THE ITAIS?
•  CALL FOR ARTICLES!

 

ARTICLES

PRE-ADMISSION ITA ONLINE ORAL INTERVIEW

Zsuzsa Cziracky Londe

 

James Valentine

 

Robert A. Filback 

Universities often provide financial support for their international graduate students by offering teaching assistantships upon admission. Low English oral proficiency could negate such an option. A pre-admission online video interview would allow departments to screen international applicants rather than rely on TOEFL scores alone or no oral-language-skill information at all.

Each year about 672,000 international students (IIENetwork, 2009) gain admission to U.S. universities. These international undergraduate and graduate students are vital to a university’s diversity but many require financial support. For graduate students, teaching assistant (TA) positions are an advantageous source for the needed financial support because the students also gain teaching experience in the process. The university also benefits from being able to fill needed TA positions.

When international students send their application packets to U.S. universities, their English proficiency can only be assumed through the TOEFL scores; furthermore, some universities, such as the University of Southern California (USC), do not even require TOEFL scores from applicants. Because departments need to make budgetary decisions before admitting a student, which includes offering graduate support, it is vital for them to know whether a student is prepared to be a TA according to the university’s language proficiency requirements.

In our presentation, an online video-interview assessment tool was described, which provides departments with a preliminary language evaluation before admission. On the basis of our experience at USC, the university with the highest international student population in the country (7200 students in 2011-2012, USC Facts and Figures), we provided contextual background for and origins of the need for an online test, practical and theoretical considerations regarding test design and implementation, and technical advice regarding current videoconferencing technologies.

BACKGROUND AND CURRENT PRACTICES

At USC we have developed a face-to-face oral interview for ITAs, which we have improved over the years. We administer this test two times during a semester, at the beginning and end of the fall, spring, and summer semesters. The procedure is as follows:

  • Potential ITAs receive two terms/concepts related to their academic field at random 24 hours prior to testing. At our request, departments have provided a list with the 100 most relevant terms in a discipline that graduate students should be able to explain. These terms are available on our Web site by department or discipline.
  • On the day of the exam, students spend about 15 minutes with two testers (both are faculty members from the American Language Institute). Students are first asked about their background, study or research of interest, and plans (5-8 minutes). Then they are asked to assume the role of a teaching assistant in a classroom of undergraduate students and to explain their chosen term for the class using the blackboard. The testers ask questions during the presentation.
  • After the student leaves, testers grade on pronunciation (P), language/grammar (L), and discourse/presentation skills (D) on a scale of 1-7, with 7 being nativelike proficiency.
  • There are three possible outcomes:
    • Student is cleared to teach – no ESL language support necessary
    • Student is cleared to teach – ESL language support is necessary
    • Student is not cleared to teach

The number of those who are not cleared to teach is small, but in the case of budgetary planning and student support, it could be meaningful. A pre-admission online interview before students arrive to campus could be a useful tool. It is important, however, to keep testing principles in mind when using this tool.

ASSESSMENT PRINCIPLES WHEN USING AN ONLINE ORAL TEST

We set out to answer two questions:

  1. Is the online test the same test as the in-person test? (same test task, different delivery channel; does it have the same reliability and validity?)
  2. Is it fair to use both the online and in-person tests interchangeably?

To answer these questions we used two second language assessment frameworks by Lyle Bachman and Adrien Palmer (1996, 2010): the “qualities of test usefulness” and the “assessment use argument.”

TEST USEFULNESS = Reliability + Validity + Authenticity + Interactiveness +

                Impact + Practicality

By analyzing each of the factors of test usefulness we have come to the conclusion that without research comparing the performance and grading consistencies of the online and in-person oral exams we can provide only a noncommittal evaluation about the student (i.e., whether he or she will be allowed to teach after the online test), and that the student, if matriculated, would have to participate in the regular ITA exam upon arrival to the university. The answer, therefore, to the first question is: Without a study, we cannot assume the tests to be formally equal.

Accountability is essential in the process of designing, administering, and evaluating tests, especially in the case of a high-stakes test such as the ITA oral exam. Bachman and Palmer’s (2010) assessment use argument provides a useful framework to guide test designers through the process of collecting evidence in support of the test. Analyzing the two tests (online vs. lin-person) using these guidelines, we have come to the conclusion that it would not be fair (until studies are conducted) to allow some students to take the online tests while others take the in-person test because we do not yet understand the possible effects of online video testing and the effects of online rating. The answer to the second question, is it fair to use both the online and the in-person test interchangeably, is also no; the two tests should not be used interchangeably until the similarities and differences have been identified.

It is because of these reasons that we have decided to advise departments that our assessment will be preliminary only, and that we reserve the right to change even our preliminary opinion upon a student’s in-person exam performance. In addition, because we do not know the comparative test qualities of the two tests, we are recommending not having similar test tasks, thereby emphasizing the difference between a preliminary test and actual test.

We are planning to conduct a comparison study and look forward to sharing the results. In the meantime, it is important to remember that we cannot let technology (or the students’ request) lead our test design before justifying every detail of the assessment process.


APPENDIX

The following is a list of current technologies that could be useful for online oral testing:

Free video-conferencing

Skype

Established, simple download; Skype Premium allows group videoconference

Google Video-chat

Simple to use; lower resolution; requires Gmail account

Google+

Hangout

Still working bugs out but lots of promise including group video-chat and multimedia sharing

OpenTok

Basic level is free - API and (beta) plug-and-play apps

Ways to record video-conferences

Skype Recorders

Several tools available to record Skype sessions and enable split 50/50 video-images; $20-30ish

iShowU

Screen recording – download about $20

Jing

Free up to 5 min. recording

Screenr

Free for recordings up to 5 min.; simple to use, no download required, recordings hosted online

Camtasia

Screen capture software

I Show You

Screen capture software

Live virtual classrooms

Bb Collaborate

Blackboard’s incorporation of Elluminate and Wimba

Adobe Connect

What MAT and other 2tor partners are using

WebEx

Been around for some time

Go To Meeting

Virtual meeting rooms monthly license cost

Proctoring

Proctor U

Two of many established and emerging online proctoring services

ProctorCam

REFERENCES

.

Bachman, L. E., & Palmer, A. S. (1996). Language testing in practice. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.

Bachman, L. E., & Palmer, A. S. (2010). Language assessment in practice. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.

IIENetwork. (2009). Open Doors. U.S. Students Studying Abroad and Open Doors 2009: International Students in the United States.


Zsuzsa Londe is the ITA testing coordinator at the University of Southern California, and she teaches academic writing at the American Language Institute. Languages, language teaching, research, assessment, and statistics are her ongoing academic interests.

Jim Valentine is the director of the American Language Institute at the University of Southern California. His principal applied research interests are human motivation, the instructional design of language programs, organizational psychology, and educational anthropology.

Rob Filback is associate professor of clinical education and faculty lead for the master of arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (MAT TESOL). His current research focus is on issues in international teacher education and program innovations, including online learning.