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Testing Oral Proficiency: Difficulties and Methods
Elihami
Introduction:
Although testing language has traditionally taken the form of testing knowledge
about language, the idea of testing communicative competence is becoming recognized as
being of great importance in second language learning. In testing communicative
competence, speaking and listening tasks are commonly used.
Those require tasks such as
the completion of an information gap and role play (Kitao & Kitao, 1996).
As language teachers, it is important for us to enhance the students’ delivery
skills,
increase their confidence, and develop their methods of organization and critical
thinking skills. On the other hand,
as language testers, it is necessary to establish a careful
research design and conduct a precise measurement to determine f these goals have been
met. The oral communication field needs a clear-cut method of evaluation as can be
found in discrete language skill classes such as listening comprehension (Nakamura &
Valens, 2001). Language teachers and language testers
need a method which takes
subjective qualitative observations and then transforms them into objective quantitative
measures.
In testing oral proficiency, or oral skills
of second language learning, four
components are emphasised. These include: vocabulary, grammar, semantics, and
phonology. Accurate assessment of limited-English speaking
learners requires a total
description of the communication skills, linguistic structures, and functional usage of the
learner’s language within all social domains (Silverman, Noa, & Russel, 1977).
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A critical issue in the assessment is the selection of criteria for evaluating
performance. Stiggins (as cited in Butler & Stevens, 1997) points out that the selection of
these criteria should be one of the first steps in designing performance assessments.
Students should understand ahead of time what is expected of them and whenever
possible, actually help them determine on what basis their performance will be judged.
When students are actively involved in establishing assessment criteria for tasks, they do
not only have a better understanding of what is expected of
them when they perform the
tasks, but they will be able to more fully appreciate why the criteria are important (Butler
& Stevens, 1997).
This paper is divided into two sections. The first provides a brief description of
the difficulties that testers of speaking skills encounter. The second presents different
methods and approaches to testing speaking skills and
oral proficiency in second
language learning.