International Journal of English Language and Linguistics Research (IJELLR)

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Ranks of Difficulty and Frequency of Attitude among Korean University Students on Test-Taking

Abstract

This study determined the ranks of difficulty as well as the rank and frequency of attitude Korean university students experienced on test-taking. Specifically, difficulties on 1) test instructions, 2) test contents, 3) test types, and 4) frequency of attitude towards testing were determined employing the exploratory-quantitative-qualitative-interpretative type of research design. Through students’ survey questionnaire and focused group discussions as well as teachers’ interview, the findings were concluded that: 1) having been taught basic grammar points and vocabulary with the use of the learning materials (Smart Choice textbooks and workbooks), the students could still not communicate confidently and spontaneously in conversation practice that made them not able to display desirable competence in some written tests and activities; 2) students’ attitudes made an impact in learning the language as most of them did not see the importance of it for future life, because they did not exert effort to learn by studying religiously and participating in all activities; 3) the students were not able to develop their linguistic and communicative potentials because only an hour and fifty minutes were spent for each class in a week, covering the four macro skills with grammar and vocabulary enrichments; and, 4) for teachers, tests were difficult to construct for validating language proficiencies because extremely poor and extremely good students were made to attend in one class altogether. It is implied that students were not emotionally- and intellectually-prepared. To establish remedy, teachers should provide 1) elaborated lecture-discussion to internalize knowledge, 2) appropriate teaching techniques to assimilate and accommodate language inputs, 3) sufficient examples of a test with various test types to demonstrate well their language skills, and 4) constant dialogue with them to establish rapport in a language testing environment and language classroom learning in general. The recommendations made by Lado (1961) and Jianrattanapong (2011) may also work in this study.

Keywords: Language Testing, Personality Factor, Short History of English Language Testing, Types Of Testing Based On Purpose and Interpretation

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Email ID: editor.ijellr@ea-journals.org
Impact Factor: 7.79
Print ISSN: 2053-6305
Online ISSN: 2053-6313
DOI: https://doi.org/10.37745/ijellr.13

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