Validating automated speaking tests

Author:

Bernstein Jared1,Van Moere Alistair2,Cheng Jian2

Affiliation:

1. Pearson Knowledge Technologies, Palo Alto, California,

2. Pearson Knowledge Technologies, Palo Alto, California

Abstract

This paper presents evidence that supports the valid use of scores from fully automatic tests of spoken language ability to indicate a person’s effectiveness in spoken communication. The paper reviews the constructs, scoring, and the concurrent validity evidence of ‘facility-in-L2’ tests, a family of automated spoken language tests in Spanish, Dutch, Arabic, and English. The facility-in-L2 tests are designed to measure receptive and productive language ability as test-takers engage in a succession of tasks with meaningful language. Concurrent validity studies indicate that scores from the automated tests are strongly correlated with the scores from oral proficiency interviews. In separate studies with learners from each of the four languages the automated tests predict scores from the live interview tests as well as those tests predict themselves in a test-retest protocol (r = 0.77 to 0.92). Although it might be assumed that the interactive nature of the oral interview elicits performances that manifest a distinct construct, the closeness of the results suggests that the constructs underlying the two approaches to oral assessment have a stable relationship across languages.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Language and Linguistics

Reference39 articles.

1. Balogh J., Bernstein J. ( 2007). Workable models of standard performance in English and Spanish. In Matsumoto Y, Oshima DY, Robinson OR , and Sells P (Eds.), Diversity in language: Perspective and implications (pp. 20-41). Stanford, CA: Center for the Study of Language and Information Publications.

2. Bernstein J., Cheng J. ( 2007). Logic, operation, and validation of a spoken English test. In Holland VM, Fisher FP (Eds.), The path of speech technologies in computer assisted language learning (pp. 174-194). New York: Routledge.

3. Bernstein J., Franco H. ( 1996). Speech recognition by computer. In Lass, N (Ed.), Principles of experimental phonetics (pp. 408-434). St. Louis, MO: Mosby.

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