Stricom 1.21.9 C - National Center for Research on
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Transcript Stricom 1.21.9 C - National Center for Research on
ONR Advanced Distributed Learning
Linguistic Modification of Test Items
Jamal Abedi
University of California, Los Angeles
National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and
Student Testing (CRESST)
July 18, 2003
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
What is linguistic modification of test
items
It is not a simple text editing
It is not language simplification
It reduces or eliminates unnecessary linguistic complexity of
assessment tools
It is based on principles of linguistic theory and research
findings
It does not change, alter, or touch any content-related term
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Examining Complex Linguistic Features in Content-Based Test Items
Feature
Feature Description
Categories Combined
1
Item length
1, 2, 4, 45
2
Vocabulary
3, 26, 27
3
Nominal heaviness
5, 6, 29, 30, 31, 32
4
Verb voice
7, 33
5
Modal
8, 34
6
Relative clause
9, 10, 11, 35, 36, 37
7
Adverbial modification
12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 38,
39, 40, 41
8
Conditional clause
18, 19
9
Complement clause
20, 44
10
Sentence structure
28, 42, 43, 46
11
Preferred argument structure
22, 23, 47, 48
12
Question form
21
13
Global difficulty
24
14
Content interest
25
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Linguistic Modification Concerns
Familiarity/frequency of
non-math vocabulary: unfamiliar
or infrequent words changed
census > video game
A certain reference file > Mack’s company
Length
of nominals: long nominals shortened
last year’s class vice president > vice president
the pattern of puppy’s weight gain > the pattern above
Question
phrases: complex question phrases changed to simple
question words
At which of the following times > When
which is best approximation of the number > approximately how many
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Linguistic Modification (continued)
Voice
of verb phrase: passive verb forms changed to active
The weights of 3 objects were compared >
Sandra compared the weights of 3 rabbits
If a marble is taken from the bag > if you take a marble from the bag
Conditional
clauses: conditionals either replaced with separate
sentences or order of conditional and main clause changed
If Lee delivers x newspapers > Lee delivers x newspapers
If two batteries in the sample were found to be dead > he found three
broken pencils in the sample
Relative
clauses: relative clauses either removed or re-cast
A report that contains 64 sheets of paper >
He needs 64 sheets of paper for each report
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Most recent updated version of
the CRESST Linguistic Modification
Rubric
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Language Modification Concerns
Language features that complicate test items
Vocabulary (Lexicon)
unfamiliar words (idioms, words from unfamiliar
contexts, long words)
false cognates
overuse of synonyms / indefinite pronouns / missing
or unclear antecedents
derivatives of content words
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Grammar (Syntax)
long phrases in questions (question word not at the beginning)
long question phrases
complex sentences (subordinating clauses)
compound sentences (coordinating conjunctions, conjunctive adverbs)
logical connectors / conditional / adverbial clauses
unfamiliar tenses (conditional verbs, modals)
long noun phrases
relative clauses
some prepositional phrases; multiple prepositional phrases
comparative structures
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Style of Discourse
• long problem statements; unnecessary
expository material
• abstract (vs. concrete) presentation of
problem
• passive voice
• complex arrangement of parts of speech
• negation, esp. negative questions, negative
terms, grammatical double negatives
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Concerns Specific to Math Problems
• phrasing that confuses the order of math
operations
• words with both technical and nontechnical meanings
• math keywords misinterpreted
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1
Summary and Recommendations
The performance gap between English learners and other students can be narrowed by
modifying the language of the test items to reduce the use of low-frequency
vocabulary and language structures that are incidental to the content knowledge
being assessed.
There is no reason why all our students should not have content-area assessments that
use clear language and provide sufficient time for them to show what they know.
The use of clear language, free of unnecessary complexity should and can be a part of
good instructional planning and assessment practice.
The specific language demands of academic materials and assessment tools should be
identified and provided to teachers so that they can ensure that students have the
language resources to demonstrate their content-area knowledge and skills.
CRESST ONR/NETC Meetings, 17-18 July 2003, v1