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Investigating the impact of self-pacing on the L2 listening performance of young learner candidates with differing L1 literacy skills

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Investigating the impact of self-pacing on the L2 listening performance of young learner candidates with differing L1 literacy skills. / Eberharter, Kathrin; Kormos, Judit; Guggenbichler, Elisa et al.
In: Language Testing, Vol. 40, No. 4, 31.10.2023, p. 960-983.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Eberharter K, Kormos J, Guggenbichler E, Ebner VS, Suzuki S, Moser-Frötscher D et al. Investigating the impact of self-pacing on the L2 listening performance of young learner candidates with differing L1 literacy skills. Language Testing. 2023 Oct 31;40(4):960-983. Epub 2023 Mar 2. doi: 10.1177/02655322221149642

Author

Eberharter, Kathrin ; Kormos, Judit ; Guggenbichler, Elisa et al. / Investigating the impact of self-pacing on the L2 listening performance of young learner candidates with differing L1 literacy skills. In: Language Testing. 2023 ; Vol. 40, No. 4. pp. 960-983.

Bibtex

@article{1e426721017b4676bbb549ace91c6ee8,
title = "Investigating the impact of self-pacing on the L2 listening performance of young learner candidates with differing L1 literacy skills",
abstract = "In online environments, listening involves being able to pause or replay the recording as needed. Previous research indicates that control over the listening input could improve the measurement accuracy of listening assessment. Self-pacing also supports the second language (L2) comprehension processes of test-takers with specific learning difficulties (SpLDs) or, more specifically, of learners with reading-related learning difficulties who might have slower processing speed and limited working memory capacity. Our study examined how L1 literacy skills influence L2 listening performance in the standard single-listening and self-paced administration mode of the listening section of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) Junior Standard test. In a counterbalanced design, 139 Austrian learners of English completed 15 items in a standard single-listening condition and another 15 in a self-paced condition. L1 literacy skills were assessed via a standard reading, non-word reading, word-naming, and non-word repetition test. Generalized Linear Mixed-Effects Modelling revealed that self-pacing had no statistically significant effect on listening scores nor did it boost the performance of test-takers with lower L1 literacy scores indicative of reading-related SpLDs. The results indicate that young test-takers might require training in self-pacing or that self-paced conditions may need to be carefully implemented when they are offered to candidates with SpLDs.",
keywords = "Accommodations, L1 literacy, fairness, listening assessment, self-paced listening",
author = "Kathrin Eberharter and Judit Kormos and Elisa Guggenbichler and Ebner, {Viktoria S.} and Shungo Suzuki and Doris Moser-Fr{\"o}tscher and Eva Konrad and Benjamin Kremmel",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1177/02655322221149642",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "960--983",
journal = "Language Testing",
issn = "0265-5322",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigating the impact of self-pacing on the L2 listening performance of young learner candidates with differing L1 literacy skills

AU - Eberharter, Kathrin

AU - Kormos, Judit

AU - Guggenbichler, Elisa

AU - Ebner, Viktoria S.

AU - Suzuki, Shungo

AU - Moser-Frötscher, Doris

AU - Konrad, Eva

AU - Kremmel, Benjamin

PY - 2023/10/31

Y1 - 2023/10/31

N2 - In online environments, listening involves being able to pause or replay the recording as needed. Previous research indicates that control over the listening input could improve the measurement accuracy of listening assessment. Self-pacing also supports the second language (L2) comprehension processes of test-takers with specific learning difficulties (SpLDs) or, more specifically, of learners with reading-related learning difficulties who might have slower processing speed and limited working memory capacity. Our study examined how L1 literacy skills influence L2 listening performance in the standard single-listening and self-paced administration mode of the listening section of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) Junior Standard test. In a counterbalanced design, 139 Austrian learners of English completed 15 items in a standard single-listening condition and another 15 in a self-paced condition. L1 literacy skills were assessed via a standard reading, non-word reading, word-naming, and non-word repetition test. Generalized Linear Mixed-Effects Modelling revealed that self-pacing had no statistically significant effect on listening scores nor did it boost the performance of test-takers with lower L1 literacy scores indicative of reading-related SpLDs. The results indicate that young test-takers might require training in self-pacing or that self-paced conditions may need to be carefully implemented when they are offered to candidates with SpLDs.

AB - In online environments, listening involves being able to pause or replay the recording as needed. Previous research indicates that control over the listening input could improve the measurement accuracy of listening assessment. Self-pacing also supports the second language (L2) comprehension processes of test-takers with specific learning difficulties (SpLDs) or, more specifically, of learners with reading-related learning difficulties who might have slower processing speed and limited working memory capacity. Our study examined how L1 literacy skills influence L2 listening performance in the standard single-listening and self-paced administration mode of the listening section of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) Junior Standard test. In a counterbalanced design, 139 Austrian learners of English completed 15 items in a standard single-listening condition and another 15 in a self-paced condition. L1 literacy skills were assessed via a standard reading, non-word reading, word-naming, and non-word repetition test. Generalized Linear Mixed-Effects Modelling revealed that self-pacing had no statistically significant effect on listening scores nor did it boost the performance of test-takers with lower L1 literacy scores indicative of reading-related SpLDs. The results indicate that young test-takers might require training in self-pacing or that self-paced conditions may need to be carefully implemented when they are offered to candidates with SpLDs.

KW - Accommodations

KW - L1 literacy

KW - fairness

KW - listening assessment

KW - self-paced listening

U2 - 10.1177/02655322221149642

DO - 10.1177/02655322221149642

M3 - Journal article

VL - 40

SP - 960

EP - 983

JO - Language Testing

JF - Language Testing

SN - 0265-5322

IS - 4

ER -