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Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning: book chapter. / Rassakazova, T.; Leontjev, D.
Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity: monograph. Екатеринбург: Издательство Уральского университета, 2020. стр. 193-209.

Результаты исследований: Глава в книге, отчете, сборнике статейГлаваРецензирование

Harvard

Rassakazova, T & Leontjev, D 2020, Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning: book chapter. в Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity: monograph. Издательство Уральского университета, Екатеринбург, стр. 193-209. https://doi.org/10.15826/B978-5-7996-3081-2.14

APA

Rassakazova, T., & Leontjev, D. (2020). Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning: book chapter. в Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity: monograph (стр. 193-209). Издательство Уральского университета. https://doi.org/10.15826/B978-5-7996-3081-2.14

Vancouver

Rassakazova T, Leontjev D. Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning: book chapter. в Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity: monograph. Екатеринбург: Издательство Уральского университета. 2020. стр. 193-209 doi: 10.15826/B978-5-7996-3081-2.14

Author

Rassakazova, T. ; Leontjev, D. / Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning : book chapter. Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity: monograph. Екатеринбург : Издательство Уральского университета, 2020. стр. 193-209

BibTeX

@inbook{d522cab49cd54ff69f485647dab47418,
title = "Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning: book chapter",
abstract = "The unprecedented emergency remote teaching [Hodges et al., 2020] has created unique challenges, with educators facing higher demands placed on them as they have to assure quality teaching, learning, and assessment under the constraints of time and additional commitments in their professional and personal lives. In this paper, we discuss how existing understandings and conceptualisations, applicable to both online and traditional classrooms, can guide educators in overcoming these challenges and, indeed, in understanding what online modality affords in learner assessment. Conceptually, we will above all, base our paper on the notion of assessment culture, namely assessment of learning and assessment for (AfL) learning cultures [Davison & Leung, 2009], arguing for the benefit of the latter in the classroom. We will also draw upon the notion of higher order and lower order thinking skills [Anderson, Brunfaut, & Harding, 2001], eliciting language functions rather than linguistic, grammatical, and syntactic categories as the object of assessment. We will base our discussion on a number of recently completed and ongoing studies in several L2 (second or foreign language) contexts. We will discuss how assessment cultures and language functions externalising thinking processes can inform educators{\textquoteright} assessment practices, alleviating educators{\textquoteright} concerns for reliability in inferences made from learners{\textquoteright} performance on online assessments and learner engagement.",
author = "T. Rassakazova and D. Leontjev",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.15826/B978-5-7996-3081-2.14",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-5-7996-3081-2",
pages = "193--209",
booktitle = "Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity",
publisher = "Издательство Уральского университета",
address = "Russian Federation",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Assessment Cultures and Virtual L2 Teaching and Learning

T2 - book chapter

AU - Rassakazova, T.

AU - Leontjev, D.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - The unprecedented emergency remote teaching [Hodges et al., 2020] has created unique challenges, with educators facing higher demands placed on them as they have to assure quality teaching, learning, and assessment under the constraints of time and additional commitments in their professional and personal lives. In this paper, we discuss how existing understandings and conceptualisations, applicable to both online and traditional classrooms, can guide educators in overcoming these challenges and, indeed, in understanding what online modality affords in learner assessment. Conceptually, we will above all, base our paper on the notion of assessment culture, namely assessment of learning and assessment for (AfL) learning cultures [Davison & Leung, 2009], arguing for the benefit of the latter in the classroom. We will also draw upon the notion of higher order and lower order thinking skills [Anderson, Brunfaut, & Harding, 2001], eliciting language functions rather than linguistic, grammatical, and syntactic categories as the object of assessment. We will base our discussion on a number of recently completed and ongoing studies in several L2 (second or foreign language) contexts. We will discuss how assessment cultures and language functions externalising thinking processes can inform educators’ assessment practices, alleviating educators’ concerns for reliability in inferences made from learners’ performance on online assessments and learner engagement.

AB - The unprecedented emergency remote teaching [Hodges et al., 2020] has created unique challenges, with educators facing higher demands placed on them as they have to assure quality teaching, learning, and assessment under the constraints of time and additional commitments in their professional and personal lives. In this paper, we discuss how existing understandings and conceptualisations, applicable to both online and traditional classrooms, can guide educators in overcoming these challenges and, indeed, in understanding what online modality affords in learner assessment. Conceptually, we will above all, base our paper on the notion of assessment culture, namely assessment of learning and assessment for (AfL) learning cultures [Davison & Leung, 2009], arguing for the benefit of the latter in the classroom. We will also draw upon the notion of higher order and lower order thinking skills [Anderson, Brunfaut, & Harding, 2001], eliciting language functions rather than linguistic, grammatical, and syntactic categories as the object of assessment. We will base our discussion on a number of recently completed and ongoing studies in several L2 (second or foreign language) contexts. We will discuss how assessment cultures and language functions externalising thinking processes can inform educators’ assessment practices, alleviating educators’ concerns for reliability in inferences made from learners’ performance on online assessments and learner engagement.

UR - https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=44638568

U2 - 10.15826/B978-5-7996-3081-2.14

DO - 10.15826/B978-5-7996-3081-2.14

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-5-7996-3081-2

SP - 193

EP - 209

BT - Communication Trends in the Post-Literacy Era: Polylingualism, Multimodality and Multiculturalism As Preconditions for New Creativity

PB - Издательство Уральского университета

CY - Екатеринбург

ER -

ID: 20916929