
Assessing Interactional Competence
Principles, Test Development and Validation through an L2 Chinese IC Test
David Wei Dai(Author)
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 24. June 2024
Book
Hardback
446 pages
978-3-631-88250-4 (ISBN)
Description
With the growing recognition of the need to broaden the definition of Interactional Competence (IC) for communication and learning, this monograph offers the first book-length treatment on the conceptualization, development and validation of IC assessment instruments. Combining psychometrics with discourse analysis, highlights of the book include: 1) evidence that a holistic IC construct - encompassing the sequential, emotional, logical, moral and categorial dimensions - can be assessed reliably, 2) a practical IC rubric that is adaptable to diverse languages and contexts, 3) demonstration that L2 speakers can have stronger IC than L1 speakers. The book argues that IC needs to be taught and assessed for both L1 and L2 speakers to promote fairness in language education.
In this superb, meticulously designed, intellectually coherent book based on awardwinning scholarship, David Wei Dai takes the reader on a riveting journey tackling key challenges in assessing Interactional Competence. Ingenious and groundbreaking; there is no looking back.
(Talia Isaacs, University College London)
David Wei Dai's book is an exemplary study of test development and validation. It breaks new ground in the assessment of Interactional Competence, and is an invaluable resource for novices and seasoned researchers alike.
(Carsten Roever, University of Melbourne)
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
100 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 153 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
683 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-631-88250-4 (9783631882504)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
David Wei Dai PhD FHEA is Lecturer/Tenured Assistant Professor in Professional Communication at UCL Institute of Education, University College London. His research interests include language assessment, Interactional Competence, professional communication and discourse analysis. His work has appeared in international peer-reviewed journals including Applied Linguistics, Language Teaching Research, Medical Education, Applied Linguistics Review, Language Assessment Quarterly, Language, Culture and Curriculum and Journal of English for Academic Purposes.
Content
Introduction - Literature review - Interpretive argument and research design - Study one: Task- based needs analysis and test design - Study two: Pilot test, indigenous criteria, and rating materials - Study three: The IC test and accompanying questionnaires - Validity argument and overall discussions - Conclusions