FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Why does an IELTS Test Report Form have a recommended 2-year validity period?
The IELTS Handbook recommends that a Test Report Form which is more than two years old should only be accepted as evidence of present level of language ability if it is accompanied by proof that a candidate has actively maintained or tried to improve their English language proficiency. This recommendation is based upon what we know about the phenomenon of second language loss or ‘attrition’, a topic which is well-researched and documented in the literature.
The level of second language competence gained and the extent of opportunity for subsequent practice both affect how much language is retained or lost over a period of time. Research points to two types of attrition. At lower proficiency levels, rapid language loss occurs soon after the end of language training/exposure (for approximately two years) and then levels off leaving a residual competency (Bahrick 1984; Weltens 1989); at higher proficiency levels the reverse pattern can be observed (Weltens and Cohen 1989) - a few years of non-attrition (an ‘initial plateau’) followed by steady loss. It appears that a critical period exists after disuse; although the nature of this may differ for high and low proficiency users, a two-year limit has been selected as a reasonable ‘safe period’.
The two-year period also parallels ETS recommendations for the use of TOEFL scores (used in a similar way to IELTS): ETS suggests that non-native speakers who have taken the TOEFL test within the past two years and who have successfully pursued academic work in an English-speaking country for a specified minimum period of time (generally two years) with English as the language of instruction may be exempted from providing TOEFL test scores.
Dostları ilə paylaş: |