This issue focuses on the first European Survey on Language Competences (ESLC), with contributions from ESLC Director Dr Neil Jones, the project team and ESLC national coordinators, describing the development and implementation of the survey and the implications for its results. Also featured is work completed for the Cambridge English Funded Research Programme (Round 2), including the use of coh-metrix for analysing Reading texts and the criterial features of Speaking at different CEFR levels.
Download Issue 52 (PDF 2.2mb)
This issue celebrates both 100 years of Cambridge English examinations and the launch of the updated Cambridge English: Proficiency exam. Topics include: a historical account of the development of Cambridge English Language Assessment and how its approach to test validation has been refined; a detailed description of the updated exam; stakeholder perceptions and candidature of the exam; and the processes and rationale behind revising it. Chief Executive Dr Michael Milanovic also speculates about the role Cambridge English Language Assessment may play in the next 100 years.
Download Issue 51 (PDF 3.9mb)
This special 50th issue of Research Notes, guest edited by Dr Jayanti Banerjee, focuses on impact. The Cambridge English approach to impact is introduced by Dr Nick Saville and is illustrated through six studies. Subjects include: the impact of Cambridge English exams as part of larger educational reform initiatives in Vietnam and China; exploring their potential effects in French and Spanish school associations; and stakeholder perceptions of the exams in China.
Download Issue 50 (PDF 1.8mb)
This issue examines performance testing, mostly focusing on written assessment. Articles include: revising the Cambridge English: Proficiency (CPE) Writing paper; the development of mark schemes; comparing computer-based and paper-based Writing for Cambridge English: Preliminary (PET); authenticity of task design in tests of academic writing and implementing a socio-cognitive model of reading in the UAE context.
Download Issue 49 (PDF 1.3mb)
This issue presents research undertaken as part of the 2011 English Australia/Cambridge ESOL Action Research in ELICOS Programme, which supports teachers working in the English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students (ELICOS) sector in Australia. Included are six funded research projects completed by teacher-researchers from five different institutions and several regions within Australia.
Download Issue 48 (PDF 1.8mb)
Under the guest editorship of Dr Jayanti Banerjee, this issue presents the outcomes from the first round of the Cambridge English Funded Research Programme undertaken in 2010. It presents four articles outlining investigations into the validity of test items and candidates’ output, and the impact and use of Cambridge English tests in two specific contexts. It also includes an update on the 40th ALTE conference.
Download Issue 47 (PDF 3.9mb)
This issue focuses on issues in teaching and assessing young learners and includes articles on:
- Cambridge English: Young Learners (YLE) tests and teaching in the Taiwanese context
- seeking stakeholders’ views on Cambridge English exams
- benchmarking young learners in Spain
- vocabulary acquisition in children
- textbook recordings
- teaching a course in assessment literacy to test takers.
Download Issue 46 (PDF 2.7mb)
This issue includes some of the papers presented at the Language Testing Research Colloquium (LTRC) in London in 2010, which was hosted by Cambridge English. The conference theme was Crossing the threshold: investigating levels, domains and frameworks in language assessment.
Download Issue 45 (PDF 452kb)
In this issue, we report on collaboration between English Australia (EA) and Cambridge English in the form of supporting action research and promoting the professional development of teachers who teach English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students (ELICOS) in Australia.
Download Issue 44 (PDF 515kb)
This issue of Research Notes is dedicated to the latest developments in technology harnessed for the purposes of language assessment at Cambridge English.
The very first Research Notes issue, published in 2000, contained an article on the use of computers in the Local Item Banking System at Cambridge English. The theme of the use of technology was continued in issues 12 (2003) and 23 (2006), which addressed the relationship between technology and language assessment within Cambridge English examinations.
Download Issue 43 (PDF 538kb)
This special issue of Research Notes features summaries of doctoral and Master’s theses by Cambridge English staff. Topics covered include: developing a model for investigating the impact of language assessment; construct validation of the Reading module of an EAP proficiency test battery; comparing proficiency levels in a multi-lingual assessment context; testing financial English – specificity and appropriacy of purpose in Cambridge English: Financial (ICFE); the expression of affect in spoken English; peer–peer interaction in a paired Speaking test – the case of Cambridge English: First (FCE); second language acquisition of dynamic spatial relations; demonstrating cognitive validity of IELTS academic Writing task; qualification and certainty in L2 writing – a learner corpus study; prompt and rater effects in second language writing performance assessment; computer-based and paper-based writing assessment – a comparative text analysis; a study of the context and cognitive validity of a Cambridge English: Business Vantage (BEC Vantage) test of Writing; models of supervision – some considerations; a framework for analysing and comparing CEFR-linked certification exams; IRT model fit from different perspectives.
Download Issue 42 (PDF 377kb)
This issue focuses on the linguistic features of a variety of Cambridge English examinations and how they differ from one proficiency level to another. Topics covered include: insights and issues arising from the English Profile Wordlists project; use of words and multi-word units in Skills for Life Writing examinations; lexis in the assessment of Speaking and Writing – an illustration from Cambridge English’s General English tests; a mixed-method approach towards investigating lexical progression in Main Suite Reading test papers; a corpus-led exploration of lexical verb use in Main Suite Writing papers; TKT: Knowledge About Language and the assessment of lexis, phonology, grammar and discourse.
Download Issue 41 (PDF 363kb)
This issue focuses on governmental projects that go across the educational spectrum from primary level to higher education. Subjects covered include: Cambridge English’s growing impact on English language teaching and learning in national education projects; General English examinations – the case of Germany; the adoption of international certification in the French state school sector; Cambridge English and Spanish school networks; the use of Cambridge English: Business Certificates as a measurement instrument in higher education in China; Cambridge English trains Thai teachers; Colombia national bilingual project; working together – the case of the English Diagnostic Test and the Chilean Ministry of Education.
Download Issue 40 (PDF 270kb)
The theme of this issue is quality assurance and its impact on language assessment, language and teaching. Subjects include: setting the standard – quality management for language test providers; implementing an internal audit process – a case study from Cambridge English; using conversation analysis to investigate the interaction of QMS audits; working with examination centres to encourage continuous high standards; the centre inspections programme; auditing the quality profile – from code of practice to standards; training auditors: the ALTE system; auditing Cambridge English’s Main Suite and Cambridge English: Business Certificates examinations; international accreditation of quality in language learning and teaching.
Download Issue 39 (PDF 718kb)
This issue focuses on professional development, both within Cambridge English and more widely. This topic includes the services we offer to encourage and support the professional development of educators and other stakeholders working with those taking a Cambridge English examination or teaching award.
Download Issue 38 (PDF 544kb)
The topic of this issue is the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) and its impact on language assessment, specifically how it is used in Cambridge English. This issue opens with an introduction by Cambridge English Chief Executive, Dr Michael Milanovic, who has been involved with the CEFR since its inception and who outlines his own stance on the CEFR and describes its influence on his own work and that of Cambridge English. This is followed by a series of articles by Cambridge English staff describing in more detail the practical, theoretical and wider issues that we face on a daily basis in relation to the CEFR.
Download Issue 37 (PDF 381kb)
This issue focuses on assessment for learning or formative assessment, usefully defined in this issue as ‘any activity (not limited to testing) which engages the expertise of language assessment specialists and has the aim of supporting learning’. Topics covered include: the classroom and the Common European Framework: towards a model for formative assessment; development of Can Do statements for Cambridge English: Key for Schools (KET for Schools) and Cambridge English: Preliminary for Schools (PET for Schools); adapting testing materials for younger learners: developing Cambridge English: Key for Schools and Cambridge English: Preliminary for Schools; validating a worldwide placement test for German; linking learning and assessment: Cambridge English’s blended learning approach; impact of a blended learning course – observation and stakeholder views.
Download Issue 36 (PDF 543kb)
The second of two issues that continue the theme of the ALTE 2008 conference, hosted by Cambridge Assessment. This event focused on the social and educational impact of language assessment and involved hundreds of delegates from many countries. In this issue we include contributions from Cambridge English colleagues and external contributors, all of whom describe various aspects of the social impact of language assessment in a range of contexts.
Download Issue 35 (PDF 293kb)
This is the first of two issues that continue the theme of the ALTE 2008 conference, hosted by Cambridge Assessment. This event focused on the social and educational impact of language assessment and involved hundreds of delegates from many countries. In this issue we include contributions from Cambridge English colleagues and external contributors, all of whom describe various aspects of the educational impact of language assessment in a range of contexts.
Download Issue 34 (PDF 322kb)
This issue focuses on English Profile, a collaborative programme of research, consultation and publication, designed to enhance the learning, teaching and assessment of English worldwide. We describe how English Profile came about, its academic and institutional partners and its three research strands, with contributions from project partners and researchers from the growing number of English Profile networks.
Download Issue 33 (PDF 327kb)
In this issue we focus on the skill of listening, the receptive skill which features in all of our language assessments. We discuss issues relevant to testing listening comprehension including establishing the nature of listening ability in a second language; the impact of technology, including the computer-based testing of listening; the writing of listening test items, including establishing sources of item difficulty; the nature of vocabulary in Listening tasks across English for specific purposes and General English tests.
Download Issue 32 (PDF 381kb)
In this issue we focus on the skill of reading, a component in all of our language assessments and teaching awards. We approach reading in a number of ways: from the general to the specific: from the theoretical (defining the construct); through the practical (operationalising the construct) to corpus-informed studies of reading vocabulary across the proficiency continuum and finally to the thematic organisation of reading passages.
Download Issue 31 (PDF 309kb)
In this issue we focus on the processes and outcomes involved in reviewing our exams, with specific reference to the reviews of Cambridge English: First (FCE) and Cambridge English: Advanced (CAE) which culminated in December 2008 with the first administration of the updated exams. This issue provides an overview of the Cambridge English: First and Cambridge English: Advanced Review Project and presents a range of major research and consultation activities – together with their outcomes – undertaken both within this project and for other exams.
Download Issue 30 (PDF 398kb)
In this issue we focus on the growing range of Cambridge English qualifications and awards designed to support initial training and ongoing professional development for teachers of English worldwide. Subjects include: Cambridge English teacher training and development – future directions; the Delta Revision Project – progress update; Delta reliability – estimating and reporting examiner performance indices for the written examination component; what difference does Delta make?; setting international standards for teaching communities of practice and teacher education – the contribution of the CELTA trainer training programme; ICELT and PEP Ukraine – evaluation of a reflective ESP teacher development programme; TKT (Teaching Knowledge Test) update.
Download Issue 29 (PDF 309kb)
In this issue we focus on the theme of testing young learners. Juliet Wilson’s introductory article outlines the background to the 2007 review of Cambridge English: Young Learners (YLE); she goes on to consider the modifications and trialling of three different tasks and describes the research which was carried out to update the vocabulary lists.
Download Issue 28 (PDF 300kb)
In this issue we focus on the theme of testing English for business and other work-related contexts. In his opening article, David Thighe discusses the response by Cambridge English to the changing assessment requirements that are resulting from globalisation and migration. Key issues include the notion of specificity, the nature of authenticity and the role of content knowledge.
Download Issue 27 (PDF 258kb)
The theme of this issue is corpora and language assessment, which is an increasingly important aspect of language testing and related areas such as teaching and publishing, as well as being more widely used in diverse fields within linguistics and education. In this issue we provide an overview of the use of corpora in testing to date and describe our current involvement in the development of corpus resources, while also considering how these and other technological developments, such as Electronic Script Management (ESM), inform our understanding of the constructs underlying language tests.
Download Issue 26 (PDF 282kb)
The theme of this issue is testing Language for Specific Purposes (LSP), an area of growing relevance in a world where specific domains demand their own language assessments in addition to well-established General English provision. Linked to an increase in the number of domains requiring specific provision (business, legal, medical, etc.) is the growth in tailor-made products for specific markets. Language testers need to be able to respond to such requirements to ensure that quality and reliability of language tests are maintained in line with existing products and frameworks.
Download Issue 25 (PDF 125kb)
The theme of this issue is frameworks in assessment and their impact on language tests, teaching awards and the various stakeholder groups who take our tests or make decisions based on them. A key framework is the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) which has a growing influence on language testing organisations and stakeholders worldwide. We reflect, in this issue, the provision we make for testing languages other than English (Asset Languages) and how we test English in other domains such as Legal, Academic and Business English.
Download Issue 24 (PDF 124kb)
The theme of this issue is technology. Technology is a key factor in maintaining our leading position in providing language assessment products and teaching awards. Topics covered include: assessment systems – conceptual, human and technological; the Cambridge English Item Banking System; ESOL Professional Support Network Extranet; IELTS Writing: revising assessment criteria and scales (Phase 5).
Download Issue 23 (PDF 150kb)
The theme of this issue is ethics in testing, primarily as it relates to test fairness in general and more specific ways. Subjects include: setting and monitoring professional standards – a QMS approach; ethical issues in the testing of young learners; the development of a computer-based version of Cambridge English: Preliminary (PET); evaluating the impact of wordprocessed text on writing quality and rater behaviour.
Download Issue 22 (PDF 406kb)
The theme of this issue is developing materials for our language tests, taking into account the central test development issues of validity, reliability, impact and practicality (VRIP). It is also important for test developers to understand their test takers’ experiential characteristics so that they can create tests that are appropriate to the target candidature.
Download Issue 21 (PDF 154kb)
The theme of this issue is impact, that is the effects that our assessment products have on a diverse range of stakeholders worldwide, including candidates, examiners, teachers, institutions and governments. Impact can take many forms, from the introduction of a new exam or changing a test format, via revising existing mark schemes, to the more localised ‘washback’ into the classroom setting or to an organisation’s decision to use a test for a specific purpose.
Download Issue 20 (PDF 184kb)
The theme of this issue is the development and validation of new assessment products and the opportunities for collaboration these bring. We report on products under development which take Cambridge English for the first time into primary, secondary, tertiary and higher education sectors in the UK with multilingual tests within the Asset Languages project; into the Adult ESOL curriculum with Skills for Life tests, as well as reporting on the development of TKT (Teaching Knowledge Test), which will assess teachers’ professional knowledge about the teaching of English to speakers of other languages in a worldwide context. This issue also focuses on developing frameworks for describing and assessing all language skills, i.e. reading, listening, writing and speaking.
Download Issue 19 (PDF 167kb)
The theme of this issue is IELTS (International English Language Testing System). IELTS is the examination provided by the three IELTS partners, Cambridge English, British Council and IDP: IELTS Australia, and is used for a variety of high-stakes purposes in academic and general training contexts. This issue covers a range of topics relating to IELTS including its position in Cambridge English and European frameworks, the comparability of alternative formats, the impact of IELTS on stakeholder groups (candidates, teachers and examiners) and revisions to the rating of this exam.
Download Issue 18 (PDF 157kb)
The theme of this issue is language testing in a European context, focusing on the work of the Association of Language Testers in Europe (ALTE) of which Cambridge English is a founding member. This issue describes the history and activities of ALTE, concentrating on some of the many projects being undertaken by ALTE members which impact on many thousands of language learners in Europe and further afield.
Download Issue 17 (PDF 344kb)
This issue focuses on the productive skill of writing, which is an integral component for most of our language testing products, with the exception of modular products such as Certificates in English Language Skills (CELS) and BULATS in which candidates can opt to take the Writing component as they wish. This issue considers a range of issues linked to assessing learners’ proficiency in writing including general assessment issues and more specific issues such as how we develop and use rating scales to accurately assess writing, how exam levels can be equated by investigating vocabulary and what is included in each syllabus.
Download Issue 16 (PDF 567kb)
This issue focuses on aspects of test development and revision for our specialised language testing products: those that test business (Cambridge English: Business Certificates – BEC) and academic English (IELTS); those aimed at young learners (Cambridge English: Young Learners – YLE) and modular tests Certificates in English Language Skills (CELS). Although our exams are the oldest and probably best-known set of tests we offer, our specialised tests are equally important in a rapidly changing world. In this issue we provide insights into the range of test development activities that we undertake, including revising tests and their underlying constructs, collecting evidence of the impact of our exams, and training examiners.
Download Issue 15 (PDF 210kb)
This issue has a special focus on our teaching awards, which are an important part of the Cambridge English range of language testing products. A number of external authors have contributed to this issue, reflecting the range of expertise that Cambridge English draws on in this area, both within and outside the UK. In this issue we describe the range of teaching awards we offer and report on related research, both completed and ongoing, specifically the impact of Cambridge English tests in classrooms and how we support teachers around the world through seminars and online teaching materials.
Download Issue 14 (PDF 147kb)
The focus of this issue is on speaking, a component of all Cambridge English language testing products. In this issue we approach the concept of speaking in various ways: from a consideration of our construct of speaking, through developing tests and ways of assessing those tests, through to the analysis of how candidates and examiners perform in Speaking tests.
Download Issue 13 (PDF 160kb)
This issue provides an overview of how technology was being used by Cambridge English together with specific examples of how it was helping us to deliver language examinations. Technology is a broad term and its wide relevance for Cambridge English is reflected in the range of topics covered in this issue.
Download Issue 12 (PDF 195kb)
This issue focuses on candidates with special needs. Topics include: responding to diversity; providing tests for language learners with disabilities; producing modified versions of Cambridge English examinations; legibility and the rating of second language writing; task difficulty in the assessment of writing – comparing performance across three levels of Certificates in English Language Skills (CELS).
Download Issue 11 (PDF 122kb)
Topics covered include: innovation and continuity – Cambridge English: Proficiency (CPE) – past and present; redeveloping Part 1 of the Cambridge English: Proficiency Listening paper; update on changes to the Cambridge English: Key (KET) and Cambridge English: Preliminary (PET) Writing papers from 2004; IELTS Writing – revising assessment criteria and scales (Phase 2); linking Cambridge English: Young Learners (YLE) levels into a single framework; investigating the Cambridge English: Young Learners storytelling task; assessing learners’ English – but whose/which English(es)?; exploring issues in the assessment of pen-and-paper/computer-based IELTS Writing.
Download Issue 10 (PDF 125kb)
Focuses on Certificates in English Language Skills (CELS). Subjects include: plurilingualism, partial competence and the CELS suite; background to CELS: the communicative construct and the precursor exams; the test development process for CELS; CELS Writing: test development and validation activity; CELS Speaking: test development and validation activity. Also includes IELTS Writing: revising assessment criteria and scales (Phase 1).
Download Issue 9 (PDF 117kb)
Focuses on tests assessing Business English and includes the revision of Cambridge English: Business Certificates (BEC) and the revision of the Standard Test for BULATS.
Download Issue 8 (PDF 195kb)
Focuses on developing English tests for young learners. Other subjects include reviewing Cambridge English: Key (KET) and Cambridge English: Preliminary (PET) and the ALTE Code of Practice.
Download Issue 7 (PDF 754kb)
Subjects include: issues in the assessment of second language writing; using corpora in language testing; revising the IELTS Speaking test; the IELTS Impact Study – development and implementation; the paired Speaking test format – recent studies; the ALTE 2001 Conference.
Download Issue 6 (PDF 390kb)
Topics covered include: revising the IELTS Speaking test; the ALTE Can Do Project and the role of measurement in constructing a proficiency framework; towards a common scale to describe L2 writing performance; computer-based BULATS: examining the reliability of a computer-based test.
Download Issue 5 (PDF 177kb)
Subjects covered include: reliability as one aspect of test quality; test development and revision; revising the IELTS Speaking test; external requests for UCLES data/materials; the UCLES EFL Seminar Programme.
Download Issue 4 (PDF 225kb)
In this issue, topics include: calibrating items for the IELTS tests; the development of working checklists as part of the Cambridge English: Proficiency (CPE) revision project; the revision of the performance components; the development of the Public English Test System by the NEEA (China); statistical analysis and ensuring computer-based and traditional versions of examinations are comparable in terms of difficulty and reliability.
Download Issue 3 (PDF 319kb)
Subjects covered include: stakeholders in language testing; investigating the impact of international language examinations; the UCLES EFL item banking system; development of new item-based tests; validation of the ALTE Can Do project and the revised CEFR; investigating the paired Speaking test format; using observation checklists to validate Speaking test tasks.
Download Issue 2 (PDF 186kb)
Includes an overview of the work of the UCLES EFL Test Development and Validation Group, and other topics, including the EFL Local Item Banking System; developing language learning questionnaires; issues in speaking assessment research; the UCLES/CUP Learner Corpus; the Studies in Language Testing series.
Download Issue 1 (PDF 165kb)