1st Edition

Addressing Issues of Access and Fairness in Education through Dynamic Assessment

Edited By Matthew E Poehner, Pauline Rea-Dickins Copyright 2013

    Increased emphasis in many school systems on formal testing to mark student achievement and hold teachers accountable has begun to heighten concern among many educational policy makers, assessment specialists, and classroom teachers over questions of access and fairness, particularly for learners from culturally different backgrounds and those with a history of academic struggles. This situation echoes that faced by the Russian psychologist L. S. Vygotsky nearly ninety years ago in his efforts to understand processes of development and meet the needs of all learners. His famous proposal of the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) holds that assessments must take account not only of abilities that have fully formed but also those that are still emerging. The diagnostic value of the ZPD lies in identifying the underlying source of learner difficulties as well as their future potential. Since Vygotsky’s time, psychologists and educators have devised a range of practices for engaging with learners in ZPD activity that have come to be known as Dynamic Assessment (DA). In DA, assessors go beyond observations of independent performance and engage cooperatively with learners to both understand and support their development.

    This process is in full evidence in the papers in this collection, which offers a cross section of applications of DA with diverse populations, including special needs learners, immigrant and minority students, and second language learners. While these papers may be read as cutting-edge academic research, they also represent a commitment to going beyond manifest difficulties and failures to help individuals construct a more positive future.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice.

    Introduction: Addressing issues of access and fairness in education through Dynamic Assessment Pauline Rea-Dickins and Matthew E. Poehner

    1. Dynamic Assessment: fairness through the prism of mediation Matthew E. Poehner

    2. Revealing the effects of cognitive education programmes through Dynamic Assessment David Tzuriel

    3. Mediated dialogue and the microgenesis of second language listening comprehension Rumia Ableeva and Jim Lantolf

    4. Upingakuneng (when they are ready): Dynamic Assessment in a third semester Yugtun class Sabine Siekmann and Walkie Charles

    5. Learning potential and cognitive modifiability Alex Kozulin

    6. Frames of interaction in Dynamic Assessment: developmental diagnoses of second language learning Matthew E. Poehner and Rémi A. van Compernolle

    Profiles of education assessment systems worldwide

    7. Assessment trends in Hong Kong: seeking to establish formative assessment in an examination culture Rita Berry

    Biography

    Matthew E. Poehner is Assistant Professor of World Languages Education and Applied Linguistics at The Pennsylvania State University, USA. His research examines the use of Vygotskian theory as both a lens for understanding second language development and a basis for educational activities that promote it. He is also the co-author (with James P. Lantolf) of the forthcoming Routledge title, Sociocultural Theory and the pedagogical imperative in L2 classrooms.

    Pauline Rea-Dickins is Professor of Applied Linguistics in Education, now working in East Africa where she is Director, Institute for Educational Development and Principal, Tanzania Institute of Higher Education, Aga Khan University. Her research focuses on the assessment of children who are being taught and formally examined through the medium of English as a second or third language. She is co-author (with Richard Kiely) of the forthcoming Second Edition of Program Evaluation in Language Education.