The
Dictation Test
Similar to cloze test
Both dictation and cloze test are able to
predict overall language ability.
Teacher begins by selecting an appropriate
passage:
· Short and
not longer than one paragraph.
· Appropriate to the students language ability and cultural background.
The structure of the dictation
a) Read out
at least three times
b) First time,
normal rate of reading.
c)
Students
listen for general idea of the passage.
d) Second
reading, little slower and expect students to write down what is read.
e)
Teacher
pauses to break the passage into meaningful chunks referred to as bursts.
f) Third
reading, students are expected to check their work, editing it for errors.
What makes a dictation difficult?
a)
The length
of the phrase or burst
- Students will have to retain more in short term memory while taking down burst.
- Students will have to retain more in short term memory while taking down burst.
b)
The length
of the pauses between bursts
- How long to pause? As long as the burst itself.
- How long to pause? As long as the burst itself.
c)
The
content of the dictation passage
- Jargon and highly technical words are difficult for some people.
d) The syntactic and structural properties of the
sentences in the passage
Complex structures make dictation more difficult.
Complex structures make dictation more difficult.
(1)
Ali caught
the woman who stole the money
(2) The woman that Ali caught stole the money
Both convey same
meaning. Second sentence is more complicated because its structure is
unfamiliar. The woman which is the
subject of the verb stoledoes not
appear immediately before the verb. The student is therefore required to make a
“long distance” connection between the subject and the verb.
e)
Clarity of
voice, expression and pace or tempo.
- Include facial expressions.
- The more animated the person dictating, the more cues are provided to the students.
Scoring a dictation
Two general methods.
- Traditional method
- Pragmatic method
Both differ in treatment of spelling error.
Let’s consider the sentences “The boy is a pessimist. He never sees the
silver lining in a dark cloud” which are read out to the students as part
of a dictation passage. How would you grade the following responses?
A. The boy is
a pessimis. He never sees the silver lining in a dark cloud.
B. The boy is
a pacifist. He never sees the silver lining in a dark cloud.
Sentence A contains a spelling mistake – pessimis – while sentence B does not.
However, in sentence B, the word pacifist
is another meaningful word in the English language that simply is not
appropriate in this context.
According to pragmatic method, the student will not be penalized for sentence A, but will have points deducted for producing sentence B.
The reasoning:
– Sentence A
is merely a spelling error which at least retains phonetics similarity to the
original.
– Sentence B
introduces a new word which makes the entire sentence inaccurate and in this
case, unacceptable as well.
Argument:
– Sentence
B, there is a clear mistake which should be treated as such is a test.
– Sentence
A, the absence of the letter “t”may
well be due to the student’s haste to note down what he has heard and is
therefore not as serious an error in a test.
Variants
of the diction
A. Graded
or graduated dictation
· Dictation
passage becomes progressively more difficult. Gradually increasing the number
of words in a burst.
· Dictation
may begin with a burst consisting of two words and the number of words slowly
increases until there can be up to thirteen or fourteen words in a burst.
· Normally
the processing load becomes too high when a burst exceeds seven words. However,
better and more proficient students will be able to handle seven words and
perhaps even more by chunking words that collocate naturally.
B. Partial
dictation
- Similar to
listening cloze activity. Students are provided the passage with some words or
phrases deleted.
- They are
expected to listen to a passage and fill in words or phrases.
- It is
commonplace to have partial dictations in which single words or even short
phrases are deleted.
C. Dictocomp
- The
students are expected to use the information they hear to construct a coherent
piece of composition instead of taking down the passage exactly as it was
dictated.
- The
teacher will determine the key elements of the original passage which the
students is expected to include in the composition.
- Dictocomp
can be said to be a test listening comprehension in a very specific way in that
the student has to decide what pieces of information are important and should
be included. This is reminiscent of summaries.
- Dictocomp
also tests writing ability as well because the students are expected to write a
cohesive piece based on the passage that was dictated to them.
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