Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language

Assuring the effectiveness of a language program requires assessing students’ performances throughout their learning career. This study explores how people from different areas of expertise assess non-native speakers’ domain-related performances in Chinese. The study obtained both quantitati...

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Main Author: Zhini Zeng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of the National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ncolctl.org/files/Jncolctl-vol-24/Beyond%20Advanced%20Proficiency%20Using%20Portfolio%20Assessment....pdf
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spelling doaj-5744658d56024af38790f5088bc30dbb2020-11-25T01:39:00ZengNational Council of Less Commonly Taught LanguagesJournal of the National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages1930-90311930-90312018-06-0124144Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign LanguageZhini Zeng0University of MississippiAssuring the effectiveness of a language program requires assessing students’ performances throughout their learning career. This study explores how people from different areas of expertise assess non-native speakers’ domain-related performances in Chinese. The study obtained both quantitative and qualitative evaluations of two American professionals’ domain-related Chinese uses from three types of native Chinese raters including domain insiders, non-teacher domain outsiders, and Chinese instructors. A substantive discrepancy is found between evaluations of domain insiders and evaluations of Chinese instructors. Domain insiders attend to the nature of each domain activity, only recognizing the utterances that fulfill certain functions within the domain. Meanwhile, a lack of domain knowledge prevents Chinese teachers from assigning meanings to lexical, grammatical, phonological, and discourse structures used for domainrelated activity. Based on these empirical findings, this study recommends using performance portfolio assessment with descriptive and transparent criteria to assess advanced level Chinese uses in highly contextualized domain-related performances.http://www.ncolctl.org/files/Jncolctl-vol-24/Beyond%20Advanced%20Proficiency%20Using%20Portfolio%20Assessment....pdfforeign language assessmentportfolioexpertiseMandarin Chinese
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhini Zeng
spellingShingle Zhini Zeng
Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language
Journal of the National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages
foreign language assessment
portfolio
expertise
Mandarin Chinese
author_facet Zhini Zeng
author_sort Zhini Zeng
title Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language
title_short Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language
title_full Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language
title_fullStr Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Advanced Proficiency: Using Portfolio Assessment to Evaluate Expertise in Communicating in Chinese as a Foreign Language
title_sort beyond advanced proficiency: using portfolio assessment to evaluate expertise in communicating in chinese as a foreign language
publisher National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages
series Journal of the National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages
issn 1930-9031
1930-9031
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Assuring the effectiveness of a language program requires assessing students’ performances throughout their learning career. This study explores how people from different areas of expertise assess non-native speakers’ domain-related performances in Chinese. The study obtained both quantitative and qualitative evaluations of two American professionals’ domain-related Chinese uses from three types of native Chinese raters including domain insiders, non-teacher domain outsiders, and Chinese instructors. A substantive discrepancy is found between evaluations of domain insiders and evaluations of Chinese instructors. Domain insiders attend to the nature of each domain activity, only recognizing the utterances that fulfill certain functions within the domain. Meanwhile, a lack of domain knowledge prevents Chinese teachers from assigning meanings to lexical, grammatical, phonological, and discourse structures used for domainrelated activity. Based on these empirical findings, this study recommends using performance portfolio assessment with descriptive and transparent criteria to assess advanced level Chinese uses in highly contextualized domain-related performances.
topic foreign language assessment
portfolio
expertise
Mandarin Chinese
url http://www.ncolctl.org/files/Jncolctl-vol-24/Beyond%20Advanced%20Proficiency%20Using%20Portfolio%20Assessment....pdf
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