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Sequencing as an item type.

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Sequencing as an item type. / Alderson, J. Charles; Percsich, R.; Szabo, G.
In: Language Testing, Vol. 17, No. 4, 10.2000, p. 423-447.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Alderson, JC, Percsich, R & Szabo, G 2000, 'Sequencing as an item type.', Language Testing, vol. 17, no. 4, pp. 423-447. https://doi.org/10.1177/026553220001700403

APA

Alderson, J. C., Percsich, R., & Szabo, G. (2000). Sequencing as an item type. Language Testing, 17(4), 423-447. https://doi.org/10.1177/026553220001700403

Vancouver

Alderson JC, Percsich R, Szabo G. Sequencing as an item type. Language Testing. 2000 Oct;17(4):423-447. doi: 10.1177/026553220001700403

Author

Alderson, J. Charles ; Percsich, R. ; Szabo, G. / Sequencing as an item type. In: Language Testing. 2000 ; Vol. 17, No. 4. pp. 423-447.

Bibtex

@article{aaf8bed7f8254ddd839e3d142d5c969c,
title = "Sequencing as an item type.",
abstract = "A text{\textquoteright}s coherence clearly depends upon the way ideas are related within that text, both in terms of their logical relations, as well as the cohesive devices that show, or create, the links between ideas, across paragraphs and sentences. Thus, it would appear that part of the ability of a competent reader is to recognize the appropriate order of ideas in text, to identify cohesion and coherence in text in order to relate the ideas to each other, and to understand authorial intention with respect to the sequence of ideas. It follows from this that a potentially useful test method that might tap such abilities is to require candidates to inspect text in which the elements are out of order, and to reconstruct the original order. This, it might be supposed, would require candidates to detect the relationship among ideas, to identify cohesive devices and their interrelationships. Such test methods are, indeed, increasingly common in so-called reading tests. However, we know of no reports of research into, or even descriptions of the use of, this promising task type. In this article we report on potential problems in scoring responses to sequencing tests, the development of a computer program to overcome these difficulties, and an exploration of the value of various scoring procedures.",
author = "Alderson, {J. Charles} and R. Percsich and G. Szabo",
year = "2000",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1177/026553220001700403",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "423--447",
journal = "Language Testing",
issn = "0265-5322",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sequencing as an item type.

AU - Alderson, J. Charles

AU - Percsich, R.

AU - Szabo, G.

PY - 2000/10

Y1 - 2000/10

N2 - A text’s coherence clearly depends upon the way ideas are related within that text, both in terms of their logical relations, as well as the cohesive devices that show, or create, the links between ideas, across paragraphs and sentences. Thus, it would appear that part of the ability of a competent reader is to recognize the appropriate order of ideas in text, to identify cohesion and coherence in text in order to relate the ideas to each other, and to understand authorial intention with respect to the sequence of ideas. It follows from this that a potentially useful test method that might tap such abilities is to require candidates to inspect text in which the elements are out of order, and to reconstruct the original order. This, it might be supposed, would require candidates to detect the relationship among ideas, to identify cohesive devices and their interrelationships. Such test methods are, indeed, increasingly common in so-called reading tests. However, we know of no reports of research into, or even descriptions of the use of, this promising task type. In this article we report on potential problems in scoring responses to sequencing tests, the development of a computer program to overcome these difficulties, and an exploration of the value of various scoring procedures.

AB - A text’s coherence clearly depends upon the way ideas are related within that text, both in terms of their logical relations, as well as the cohesive devices that show, or create, the links between ideas, across paragraphs and sentences. Thus, it would appear that part of the ability of a competent reader is to recognize the appropriate order of ideas in text, to identify cohesion and coherence in text in order to relate the ideas to each other, and to understand authorial intention with respect to the sequence of ideas. It follows from this that a potentially useful test method that might tap such abilities is to require candidates to inspect text in which the elements are out of order, and to reconstruct the original order. This, it might be supposed, would require candidates to detect the relationship among ideas, to identify cohesive devices and their interrelationships. Such test methods are, indeed, increasingly common in so-called reading tests. However, we know of no reports of research into, or even descriptions of the use of, this promising task type. In this article we report on potential problems in scoring responses to sequencing tests, the development of a computer program to overcome these difficulties, and an exploration of the value of various scoring procedures.

U2 - 10.1177/026553220001700403

DO - 10.1177/026553220001700403

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 423

EP - 447

JO - Language Testing

JF - Language Testing

SN - 0265-5322

IS - 4

ER -