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EAL assessment in schools

EAL is not a uniform phenomenon at the level of individual pupils. Some pupils with EAL are bi/multilingual local young people with (relatively) long experience of residency. These pupils tend to have a working knowledge of local ways of using English, particularly in the spoken mode in informal social contexts. Others arrive at school from Europe and other world locations with some knowledge of the English language but they have little experience with the use of English for a variety of personal, social and academic purposes. Yet others join school as absolute beginners of English and new comers to local British culture. These latter groups of pupils have different language and literacy learning needs from those who are already long term residents in local communities. Teachers have found that it is very important to identify the distinct types of pupil English language needs with reference to different ages, language backgrounds/levels of English proficiency, educational experiences, and community contexts through assessment. While it is understood that the use of any assessment criteria will yield a result, the issue is whether the assessment result is summatively meaningful and formatively useful (for responding to pupil needs). Our experience tells us that effective assessment of EAL development, particularly for formative purposes, requires specialist professional knowledge and practice. NALDIC has recently trialled descriptors for formative assessment in KS1 and KS2.

Recent research in educational measurement has shown that well-planned and pupil-oriented formative assessment, sometimes referred to as ‘assessment for learning’, can have a very beneficial effect on learning. Formative assessment is carried out by teachers in the classroom and is directly concerned with improving pupils’ learning. Sensitive formative assessment of pupils’ classroom performance demands a high level of teacher awareness of pupil needs. Given the very diverse language experiences and language learning needs of the different groups EAL pupils, account needs to be taken of not just the ‘nuts and bolts’ of the English language, e.g. vocabulary, pronunciation and word order, but also the even more complex and less ‘visible’ aspects of language use. These include social rules of language use (e.g. politeness and formality in context), use of literary and metaphoric language expressions for different purposes, subject specific registers, established and taken-for granted social ways of doing things through language in school and in the local community (e.g. conventionalised ways of offering information during circle time, collaborative talk in group tasks).


Section Editor

Constant Leung

On this page you will find web pages from the archived ITTSEAL site for teacher educators new to initial teacher training. Much of this material is being substantially rewritten and incorporated into our new site but we have maintained this archive to support referencing and site users.

The PDF pages are arranged in the same structure as on the original site. Please note that embedded hyperlinks in the documents will not work and external weblinks are no longer necessarily live. If you are searching for a particular resource which you cannot find, please contact us and we will try to help.

Assessment

Assessment practices in schools
Assessment for learning
Access arrangements
Assessment and Achievement