Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry

Despite arriving with the required language qualifications, many international students struggle with the linguistic demands of a university degree. Using the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) as an example, this study explored how short but intensive preparation programmes may a...

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Main Authors: Danijela Trenkic, Ruolin Hu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: White Rose University Press 2021-02-01
Series:Journal of the European Second Language Association
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.euroslajournal.org/articles/74
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spelling doaj-96d26f7cef964db493171b3558097b8f2021-03-16T05:04:06ZengWhite Rose University PressJournal of the European Second Language Association2399-91012021-02-015110.22599/jesla.7437Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entryDanijela Trenkic0Ruolin Hu1University of YorkUniversity College London Institute of EducationDespite arriving with the required language qualifications, many international students struggle with the linguistic demands of a university degree. Using the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) as an example, this study explored how short but intensive preparation programmes may affect high-stakes English-proficiency test scores with which students apply for university places. The participants were 89 Chinese speakers of English as a foreign language in Shanghai. They were tested twice, four weeks apart, on IELTS and three other measures of English ability: The Oxford Online Placement Test, a vocabulary test, and the speed and accuracy of sentence comprehension. Between the two testing points, 45 participants underwent testspecific training consisting of previous IELTS papers, offered by a large test-preparation establishment with a network of over 1,000 training centres. The remaining 44 participants did not engage in any test preparation at the time. Teaching to the test led to a half a band rise in IELTS scores above the gain from test repetition alone, suggesting that the training was effective. Importantly, the IELTS gain did not generalise to the other measures of English ability; the groups performed similarly on all other language tests at both times. This suggests that test-specific, curriculum-narrowing courses could be inflating the scores with which international students apply for university places, with important consequences for test-developers, universities and students.https://www.euroslajournal.org/articles/74english-language proficiency assessmentlanguage testingtest preparationcoachinginternational studentshigher educationielts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Danijela Trenkic
Ruolin Hu
spellingShingle Danijela Trenkic
Ruolin Hu
Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry
Journal of the European Second Language Association
english-language proficiency assessment
language testing
test preparation
coaching
international students
higher education
ielts
author_facet Danijela Trenkic
Ruolin Hu
author_sort Danijela Trenkic
title Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry
title_short Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry
title_full Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry
title_fullStr Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry
title_full_unstemmed Teaching to the test: The effects of coaching on English-proficiency scores for university entry
title_sort teaching to the test: the effects of coaching on english-proficiency scores for university entry
publisher White Rose University Press
series Journal of the European Second Language Association
issn 2399-9101
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Despite arriving with the required language qualifications, many international students struggle with the linguistic demands of a university degree. Using the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) as an example, this study explored how short but intensive preparation programmes may affect high-stakes English-proficiency test scores with which students apply for university places. The participants were 89 Chinese speakers of English as a foreign language in Shanghai. They were tested twice, four weeks apart, on IELTS and three other measures of English ability: The Oxford Online Placement Test, a vocabulary test, and the speed and accuracy of sentence comprehension. Between the two testing points, 45 participants underwent testspecific training consisting of previous IELTS papers, offered by a large test-preparation establishment with a network of over 1,000 training centres. The remaining 44 participants did not engage in any test preparation at the time. Teaching to the test led to a half a band rise in IELTS scores above the gain from test repetition alone, suggesting that the training was effective. Importantly, the IELTS gain did not generalise to the other measures of English ability; the groups performed similarly on all other language tests at both times. This suggests that test-specific, curriculum-narrowing courses could be inflating the scores with which international students apply for university places, with important consequences for test-developers, universities and students.
topic english-language proficiency assessment
language testing
test preparation
coaching
international students
higher education
ielts
url https://www.euroslajournal.org/articles/74
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