[Assessment 1320] Re: CASAS vs. BESTBryan Woerner bwoerner at cal.orgFri May 16 17:48:27 EDT 2008
Hello Maria, BEST Plus and BEST Literacy were developed for use with adult English language learners who need to use English to function in day-to-day life in an English-speaking context in the 50 United States. This means that all test items and graphics were developed and included in the tests based on cultural assumptions about life in the US. Therefore, the results from either test really wouldn't be valid. They also wouldn't suitable test for non-American English speakers who first language is English, if I understand you correctly. The tests were designed for non-native speakers. If, however, a non-native speaker who learned British English came to the US and took ESL classes, then he or she could be tested with BEST Plus or BEST Literacy. What was known as the "BEST test" or the Basic English Skills Test, is no longer published. It was developed in the 1980's and hadn't been updated since then. The oral interview was replaced by BEST Plus in 2003 and the literacy skills section was updated and became BEST Literacy in 2006. Since the BEST test was around for so long, the nomenclature sometimes get mixed up. But, like its descendents, it too was only valid within the US for the same reasons. And I would suggest to Anthony that he contact the TESOL organization. They published a book called ESOL Tests and Testing which is a compilation of many different ESL, EFL and ESP assessments. http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/sec_document.asp?CID=856&DID=3460 Bryan ________________________________ From: assessment-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:assessment-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Marie Cora Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 5:11 PM To: 'The Assessment Discussion List' Subject: [Assessment 1318] Re: CASAS vs. BEST Hi Bryan and Anthony, A question to you Bryan - is the BEST then available for folks outside the US? Also, do you believe it's suitable for English speakers from countries other than the US? Thanks! Marie Cora Assessment Discussion List Moderator -----Original Message----- From: assessment-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:assessment-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Bryan Woerner Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 2:35 PM To: The Assessment Discussion List Subject: [Assessment 1317] Re: CASAS vs. BEST Hello Anthony, BEST Plus was designed for use with adult English language learners in the United States. Bryan Adult ESL Assessments Center for Applied Linguistics ________________________________ From: assessment-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:assessment-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Anthony Berry Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 8:34 AM To: The Assessment Discussion List Subject: [Assessment 1315] Re: CASAS vs. BEST Could someone please tell me how I an have sight of BEST. I have been looking for an adaptive, normative, diagnostic test for ages and this seems as though it might fit the bill. What flavour of English is it? Yes, you can see that I am of the Queen's English brigade! Thanks for any help - btw this would be for research purposes not productive use. Anthony Berry ________________________________ Date: Fri, 16 May 2008 04:34:28 -0700 From: mjjerdems at yahoo.com To: assessment at nifl.gov Subject: [Assessment 1314] Re: CASAS vs. BEST The BEST is great for assessing the learner's production of English. Its additional pluses are that there are not test forms that learners can learn it identify and recall easily; the test questions become harder or easier depending on how the learner's responses are scored, which mitigates differences between assessors; and it would be better able to identify small progress than CASAS forms. The one major downside is that it takes time and more time as the learners progress. A large program simply cannot afford to put the hours into testing that BEST Plus requires. I've used both CASAS and BEST Plus in smaller programs because one instrument cannot give a full picture on a learner (Assessment 101), and it maximizes the chance to show improvement at post-test. Good luck, Mary Jane Jerde Howard Community College "Rodrick Beiler, Ingrid" <Ingrid.RodrickBeiler at montgomerycountymd.gov> wrote: Hi everyone I serve as the coordinator for an adult ESOL program in Montgomery County, MD. We offer classes mostly at the beginner level, with some classes at literacy and intermediate levels as well. I am fairly new to this field and am trying to determine the comparative usefulness of CASAS and BEST for assessment of our program. Can anyone comment on how/why their organizations might have chosen one over the other? In case it is helpful for understanding my organization's needs, here is some more background information: - We serve about 275-300 learners per semester. - Many of our learners have a very low educational level. - Pre- and post-tests are administered by our instructors during the first and last classes of the semester. - Placement tests are administered by coordinators at each of our sites in one-on-one interviews. - We provide 36-48 instructional hours per semester. (I wonder if this precludes our using the BEST.) - Most of our funding comes from two sources (government and a private funder). - The cost of standardized assessments is an important factor to us. Your advice is much appreciated. Thanks, Ingrid Rodrick Beiler Ingrid Rodrick Beiler ESOL Coordinator Linkages to Learning 51 Monroe Street, Suite 1700 Rockville, MD 20850 Phone: (240) 777-1110 Fax: (240) 777-1111 ingrid.rodrickbeiler at montgomerycountymd.gov ------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Assessment mailing list Assessment at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/assessment Email delivered to mjjerdems at yahoo.com ________________________________ Get 5GB of online storage for free! Get it Now! <http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/msnnkmgl0010000005ukm/direct/01/> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/assessment/attachments/20080516/1b8813df/attachment.html
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