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INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn. edu

INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra [email protected] u

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Page 1: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University

Katie [email protected]

Page 2: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

SWBAT Theory & Practice Q: What is the purpose of requiring and

assessing speech acts in an English classroom?

A: Students will be able to…Action Objectives:oAddressoDevelopoEngageoExpandoImproveoFormulateoLead

oNavigate

oPrepareoProjectoPromoteoSelf-analyzeoSpeakoUtilizeoValue

Page 3: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Sample Action Objectives How would you assess these skills?1.Speak comfortably and fluently in conversational situations,

2.Address large and small groups using formal speech,

3.Lead and actively participate in group conversations,

4.Utilize counter-argumentation techniques in debate or persuasive speaking style,

5.Develop etiquette strategies for speaking to a diverse population,

6.Promote themselves using interview skills,

7.Prepare English phrases for urgent situations,

8.Self-analyze and respond to body language and hesitation markers in speech,

9.Expand upon impromptu and small-talk topics,

10.Improve pronunciation skills, including intonation, stress and rhythm.

Page 4: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Contextualized Objectives

Informal Individual: Extemporaneous/Impromptu

Speeches, Introductions, Storytelling with pictures

Conversational: Small Talk Topics, Conversation Partners/Tandem Programs, Situational Role Plays

Formal Individual: Genre Speeches (Research?),

Speaking Journals Paired: Microteaching, Genre Speech (Good

Deeds), Paired Speeches (Movie Critique/Interview)

Group: VoiceThread (Group Journal/Message board), Debate, Emergency Situation Role Plays, Theater

Page 5: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Food for Thought

Our speech acts often depend upon the appropriate

Sociopragmatic signals of our culture which we develop

in our L1 from the time we are infants.

Our students' best chance for developing their speaking

fluency in their L2 depends on our ability to set the

scene: -Formal/Informal Practice -Holistic Grading/Rubrics -Individual/Paired/Group Work -Micro/Macro Skills

Page 6: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Forms of Assessment

Sliding scale points

Point-per-task Focused task

completion Ignores errors

that aren't related to main objective (vocabulary use, pronunciation, word order, intonation)

Continuum of points

Specific descriptors of goals See examples:

Mock Interview Good Deeds

Holistic/Task Completion Rubrics

Page 7: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Assessing Informal Speech Acts

Look at this list of informal speech acts. Decide:

1) What active objective is being accomplished?

2) How would you rate the student's performance?

Extemporaneous/Impromptu Speeches: Pop Topics – Students practice talking with a

partner about random topics assigned to them for 5 minutes at a time. Partners may elect them for large group presentations.

Small Talk Topics – Students are given a situation which they are likely to find themselves in and asked to assign roles with their partner and begin speaking about it.

Storytelling Task (see next slide)

Page 8: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Assessing Informal Speech Acts

Storytelling Task

Students are given a series of pictures (e.g. storybook, comic strip, or travel photos…)

The student must describe what they see after a few minutes of reflection.

Encourage students to use grammatical phrases, details, and time markers.

What active objective is being accomplished?

How would you rate the student's performance?

From ELSA Handbook 2003.

Page 9: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Food for Thought

"When people talk, they lay lines on each other, do a lot of role playing, sidestep, shilly-shally and engage in all manner of vagueness and innuendo. We do this and expect others to do it, yet at the same time we profess to long for the plain truth, for people to say what they mean, simple as that. Such hypocrisy is a human universal." Steven Pinker

Page 10: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Assessing Informal Speech ActsSociopragmatic Speech Acts in Role Plays: Apologies Complaints Compliments/Responses Refusals Requests ThanksPractice using specialized grammar, polite

phrasing, and indirect speech for these and other common face-saving situations (formal & informal speech).

Page 11: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Sociopragmatic Example: Apologies

Taken from Carla, The Center for Advance Research on Language Acquisition, UMN (Cohen & Olshtain, 1981):

Can you guess how Americans would use apologies for the following purposes? Create the scene.

An expression of apology (e.g. I'm so very sorry!) Acknowledgement of responsibility (e.g. It's my fault.) Explanation or account (e.g. The bus was late.) Offer of repair (e.g. How can I make it up to you?) Promise of non-recurrence (e.g. It won't happen again)

Why are these speech acts important? When would your students use them? Think about the level of your students. What additional preparation would they need?

Page 12: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Sociopragmatic Example: Refusals

Taken from Carla, The Center for Advance Research on Language Acquisition, UMN (Cohen & Olshtain, 1981):

Imagine that you have to make a refusal for the following situations. How could you do so while being polite? Would your language change if you were talking to your boss vs. friend?

Refusal of Request (e.g. additional work/helping a friend) Refusal of Invitations (e.g. birthday invitation) Refusal of Offers (e.g. offer to dry clean your coat after

spilling on it) Refusal of Suggestions (e.g. suggestion to change work

habits) Why are these speech acts important? When would

your students use them? Think about the level of your students. What additional preparation would they need?

Page 13: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Informal –> Formal Voicethread

http://voicethread.com/

Page 14: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Assessing Formal Speech Acts

Start with a clear statement of requirements Consider showing your rubric or grading

method ahead of time Practice peer assessment (Native Speaker &

Peer Ex.) Use variety:

Microteaching (great for grammar or research review)

Good Deeds Speech Mock Interviews Emergency Situation Role Plays

Page 15: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Bloom's Taxonomy Preview

In 1956, Benjamin Bloom proposed a taxonomy of student learning objectives. The taxonomy is a range of skills attained by students. The assessment techniques used to measure student success along this range of objectives can be formative or summative in nature.

Formative= Decision Making/Creative Application

Summative= Information Retention

Page 16: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Assessing Micro/Macro Skills

Interview Skills Pop Topics Good Deeds

Speech …

Role plays Storytelling Social Speech

Acts …

Knowledge – Understand - Apply

Analyze – Evaluate - Create

Page 17: INNOVATIVE SPEAKING ASSESSMENTS 15 December – Minsk State Linguistic University Katie Subra subr0054@umn.ed u

Resources

Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition. (2013). Description of Speech Acts. UMN. Retrieved from: http://www.carla.umn.edu/speechacts/refusals/american.html

ELSA Handbook. (2003). LCCIEB Customer Service. p. 56.

Fulcher, G. (2003). "Tasks for second language speaking tests" in Testing second language speaking (pp. 50-87). Harlow, England: Longman/Pearson Education.

Contact me with questions or to obtain a copy of this Powerpoint: [email protected]