An Evidentiary Framework for Operationalizing Academic Language for Broad Application to K-12 Education: A Design Document. CSE Report.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: An Evidentiary Framework for Operationalizing Academic Language for Broad Application to K-12 Education: A Design Document. CSE Report.
Language: English
Authors: Bailey, Alison L., Butler, Frances A., National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing, Los Angeles, CA., California Univ., Los Angeles. Center for the Study of Evaluation.
Availability: For full text: http://www.cresst.org/reports/R611.pdf.
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 46
Publication Date: 2003
Sponsoring Agency: Institute of Education Sciences (ED), Washington, DC.
Contract Number: R305B960002
Report Number: CSE-R-611
Document Type: Reports - Descriptive
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Research
Geographic Terms: U.S.; California
Abstract: With the No Child Left Behind Act (2001), all states are required to assess English language development (ELD) of English language learners (ELLs) beginning in the 2002-2003 school year. Existing ELD assessments do not, however, capture the necessary prerequisite language proficiency for mainstream classroom participation and for taking content-area assessments in English, thus making their assessment of ELD incomplete.What is needed are English language assessments that go beyond the general, social language of existing ELD tests to capture academic language proficiency (ALP) as well,thereby covering the full spectrum of English language ability needed in a school setting.This crucial testing need has provided impetus for examining the construct of academic language (AL) in depth and considering its role in assessment, instruction, and teacher professional development. This document provides an approach for the development of an evidentiary framework for operationalizing ALP for broad K-12 educational applications in these three key areas. Following the National Research Council (2002) call for evidence-based educational research, we assembled a wide array of data from a variety of sources to inform our effort. We propose the integration of analyses of national content standards (National Science Education Standards of the National Research Council), state content standards (California, Florida, New York, and Texas), English as a Second Language (ESL) standards, the language demands of standardized achievement tests, teacher expectations of language comprehension and production across grades, and the language students actually encounter in school through input such as teacher oral language, textbooks, and other print materials. The initial product will be a framework for application of ALP to test specifications including prototype tasks that can be used by language test developers for their work in the K-12 arena. Long-range plans include the development of guidelines for curriculum development and teacher professional development that will help assure that all students, English-only and ELLs alike, receive the necessary English language exposure and instruction to allow them to succeed in education in the United States. (Author)
Journal Code: RIEJUL2004
Entry Date: 2004
Accession Number: ED483026
Database: ERIC
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