2004
DOI: 10.1191/0265532204lt283ed
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Understanding teachers as agents of assessment

Abstract: Teaching involves assessment. In making decisions about lesson content and sequencing, about materials, learning tasks and so forth, teachers have to determine the strengths and weaknesses of the alternatives available to them. They make selections based on their experience, on their understandings of learning, language development and of language proficiency itself, together with what they consider to be most appropriate and in the best interests of those they teach. Equally, as part of their professional pra… Show more

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Cited by 102 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…Research on how teachers assess young language learners (henceforth YLLs) is fairly limited (Nikolov & Mihaljević Djigunović, 2011;Rea-Dickins, 2004). In a case study investigating teachers' performance during assessment in the classroom of English as an additional language in England, Rea-Dickins and Gardner (2000) revealed a lack of systematicity in assessment practices.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on how teachers assess young language learners (henceforth YLLs) is fairly limited (Nikolov & Mihaljević Djigunović, 2011;Rea-Dickins, 2004). In a case study investigating teachers' performance during assessment in the classroom of English as an additional language in England, Rea-Dickins and Gardner (2000) revealed a lack of systematicity in assessment practices.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As stressed by Piegzik (2005), assessment is equally important to the teacher and the learner, as it contributes to the efficiency of both teaching and learning. Emphasizing the huge role of teachers in making assessment become a vital part of learning, Rea-Dickins (2004) refers to them as "agents" of assessment, in that they routinely observe, evaluate and interpret students' performance in order to enhance their learning outcomes. In a similar vein, Brown (2004) compares them to "tennis coaches", who are constantly monitoring students' performance.…”
Section: Foreign Language Teachers' Involvement In Language Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fourth and the fifth perspectives focus on instruction-based formative dimension of assessment and learners' involvement in it. Leung and Lewkowicz (2006) note that apart from considerations concerning the design and administration of large-scale certificate testing, scho-ol and classroom-based assessment is increasingly the focus of researchers' attention, although Rea-Dickins (2004) and Cheng et al (2004) complain that this dimension of assessment has not yet been adequately embraced by research. Similarly, Davison and Leung (2009) admit that teacher-based assessment of English as a second/foreign language has been largely neglected by research, in contrast to the amount of such research into the teaching of other school subjects.…”
Section: Language Assessment Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The importance of the teachers' practice in assessment is inevitable as they are the core of this process: making decisions about the process of the lessons, determining the strengths and weaknesses of alternatives available to them, making selections on their experience and making judgments about learners' progress (Rea-Dickins, 2004). Teachers need to use assessments (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%