For the past few years, I have been serving as a coach for Acquisition Boot Camp (ABC), the online CI/ADI course presented by The Comprehensible Classroom and led by Martina Bex and Elicia Cardenas. This online course is an absolutely wonderful class for those new to CI/ADI, as well as a great refresher for those who are experienced! Even as a coach, I feel like I am learning (and relearning/deepening my understanding) about the basics of CI/ADI.
One of the week's modules of lessons addresses assessments/grading and how to implement standards-based grading using the ACTFL proficiency guidelines. Although I was familiar with the ACTFL standards and what they represented in terms of the language acquisition process, I had never thought of aligning them for grading purposes. As I learned more about this, it made all the more sense to use them!
Although the ACTFL proficiency standards are not based on "levels" (such as Spanish 1, Spanish 2, etc), they can be applied to what target proficiency markers students should be demonstrating at which level:
- Level 1 - Novice Mid
- Level 2 - Novice High
- Level 3 - Intermediate Low
- Level 4 - Intermediate Low (yes, level 4 target is still intermediate low, since the intermediate level is so "messy")
One of the biggest shifts for me has been that this type of grading is not based on performance, which is the traditional "marking errors and deducting points," but rather on proficiency, i.e., what is it that students can do and what skills are they exhibiting in their language learning process? Language learning proficiency-based grading is holistic in nature and implements rubrics which are aligned with the ACTFL proficiency guidelines.
Already I am hearing some of you say, "But students need to know their correct endings, how to spell words correctly, say/write/translate things perfectly, etc.." Yes, I completely agree with you, BUT the accuracy component comes so much later in the language acquisition process with continued input. Essentially when we are expecting correct grammar from beginning language learners, we are wanting native-like language from novice learners right away! The accuracy component will eventually kick in - not just immediately! (see reference to my blog post on the theory of ordered development). As language teachers, we have based our idea of language learning on textbooks and our own experiences, which are centered on the notion that language learning is linear in nature, when in reality it is NOT! This is why World Language is unlike any other subject area.
So in researching the use of rubrics for proficiency-based language learning, I found so many good resources:
- Oh my gosh, the rubric made grading SO MUCH easier and quicker. While I was still using my shorthand for "errors" (still a difficult habit for me to break!), after reading the students' writings, I knew exactly where they fell on the proficiency scale in terms of what skills they were communicating. Because I was anticipating errors to begin with, I was only looking to see if the errors impeded comprehension for me, a "sympathetic reader accustomed to non-native language communication" (an ACTFL term) and to what degree those errors did.
- The majority of students scored 85s and 100s, showing me that for this timed write, they were demonstrating Novice Mid and Novice High writing (again, this timed write was just spitting back to me a retelling of a clip chat, so not a true free write), i.e. exactly where they should be.
- I did have a number of students score 70's (Novice Low) and 50's (emerging). These students have been chronically absent and have not been here for much of the semester. In other words, their grade did correctly reflect their level of proficiency.
- Remember that this rubric is based on proficiency, hence there are no grammar mastery indicators, such as "exhibits proper use of the dative case," etc.
- I have used the picture below in many of my blog posts, but it accurately represents how we should be viewing student communication in the target language:
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