Computer-Based Testing
Recent years have seen a burgeoning of assessment in which the test-taker performs responses on a computer. Some computer-based tests (also known as "computer-assisted" or"web-based" tests) are small-scale "home-grown" tests available on websites. Others are standardized, large-scale tests in which thousands or even tens of thousands of test-takers are involved. Students receive prompts (or probes, as they are sometimes referred to) in the form of spoken or written stimuli from the computerized test and are required to type (or in some cases, speak) their responses. Almost all computer-based test items have fixed, closed-ended responses; however, tests like the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) offer a written essay section that must be scored by humans (as opposed to automatic, electronic, or machine scoring) As this book goes to press, the designers of the TOEFL are on the verge of offering a spoken English section.
Computer-Based TestingRecent years have seen a burgeoning of assessment in which the test-taker performs responses on a computer. Some computer-based tests (also known as "computer-assisted" or"web-based" tests) are small-scale "home-grown" tests available on websites. Others are standardized, large-scale tests in which thousands or even tens of thousands of test-takers are involved. Students receive prompts (or probes, as they are sometimes referred to) in the form of spoken or written stimuli from the computerized test and are required to type (or in some cases, speak) their responses. Almost all computer-based test items have fixed, closed-ended responses; however, tests like the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) offer a written essay section that must be scored by humans (as opposed to automatic, electronic, or machine scoring) As this book goes to press, the designers of the TOEFL are on the verge of offering a spoken English section.
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Computer-Based Testing
Recent years have seen a burgeoning of assessment in which the test-taker performs responses on a computer. Some computer-based tests (also known as "computer-assisted" or"web-based" tests) are small-scale "home-grown" tests available on websites. Others are standardized, large-scale tests in which thousands or even tens of thousands of test-takers are involved. Students receive prompts (or probes, as they are sometimes referred to) in the form of spoken or written stimuli from the computerized test and are required to type (or in some cases, speak) their responses. Almost all computer-based test items have fixed, closed-ended responses; however, tests like the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) offer a written essay section that must be scored by humans (as opposed to automatic, electronic, or machine scoring) As this book goes to press, the designers of the TOEFL are on the verge of offering a spoken English section.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..