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Learner Identity, Learner Agency, and the Assessment of Language Proficiency: Some Reflections Prompted by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2015

David Little
Affiliation:
Trinity College Dublin, Irelanddlittle@tcd.ie
Gudrun Erickson
Affiliation:
University of Gothenburg, Swedengudrun.erickson@ped.gu.se

Abstract

This article starts from the assumption that education is a process of “people shaping” designed to help learners extend and perhaps in some ways modify their identity while exploiting and developing their agency. This view is harmonious with the approach to language education that the Council of Europe has developed since the 1970s, and especially with its early commitment to learner autonomy and self-assessment. The approach adopted by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, teaching, assessment (CEFR) to the description of language proficiency clearly implicates the user-learner's identity and agency, which are also central to the CEFR's companion piece, the European Language Portfolio (ELP), in which self-assessment plays a key role. The article proposes that taken together, the CEFR and the ELP imply an assessment culture in which learning and assessment are reciprocally integrated. From the perspective thus established, the authors review some current trends in language assessment and their potential impact on learner identity and learner agency, focusing in turn on self-assessment, peer assessment, teacher assessment, and large-scale testing and assessment. The article concludes by arguing that although recent developments in language assessment pay significantly more attention to the learner than was previously the case, a great deal of work remains to be done to further increase the engagement of learner agency in processes of self-assessment and peer assessment and to align them with other forms of assessment.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

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References

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

Little, D. (2006). The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Content, purpose, origin, reception and impact. Language Teaching, 39, 167190.

This state-of-the-art article provides essential background for readers who are not already familiar with the CEFR. It describes the CEFR's content in some detail, situates it in the context of the Council of Europe's values and policy, summarizes its genesis, and discusses its impact on curricula, teaching/learning, and assessment.

North, B. (2014). The CEFR in practice (English Profile Studies 4). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Brian North was responsible for the development and scaling of the “can do” descriptors that quickly became the CEFR's best-known feature. Drawing on more than two decades’ involvement in the Council of Europe's work in language education, his book provides a detailed account of the CEFR's role as a common framework, its implications for planning and teaching, and what is involved in assessing CEFR levels. The concluding chapter considers the extent to which the CEFR is generating change, priorities for curriculum development in the future, and how the CEFR can be further exploited and developed.

Shohamy, E., & Hornberger, N. H. (eds.) (2008). Encyclopedia of Language and Education: Vol. 7. Language testing and assessment. New York, NY: Springer.

The four sections of this volume—Assessing Language Domains, Methods of Assessment, Assessment in Education, and Assessment in Society—bring together 29 contributions that between them provide an authoritative overview of current thinking in the field and confirm the common concerns and principles that shape all forms of language assessment.

Gardner, J. (ed.) (2012). Assessment and learning (2nd ed.). London, UK: Sage.

This edited collection contains contributions from some of the leading scholars in the fields of learning and assessment. It offers a comprehensive overview of recent thinking on assessment in relation to learning across the curriculum and will provide a stimulating starting point for readers who wish to undertake their own exploration of the issues addressed in this article and (especially) the challenge referred to in our concluding sentence.

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