6533b85dfe1ef96bd12be02e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Comparing the outcomes of two different approaches to CEFR-based rating of students’ writing performances across two European countries

Franz HolzknechtAri HuhtaIasonas LamprianouFranz HolzknechtAri HuhtaIasonas Lamprianou

subject

Linguistics and LanguageApplied psychologyta6121Language and LinguisticsEducationRaschin malli0504 sociologyRating scaleta516rater effects060201 languages & linguisticsRasch modelScope (project management)05 social sciencesSignificant difference050401 social sciences methodskielitaito06 humanities and the artsrating scalesassessing writingCEFR levels0602 languages and literaturePsychologyRasch modelarviointikirjoittaminen

description

This study investigated to what extent two teams of experienced raters from different European countries (Finland and Austria), using their own CEFR-based rating scale (one holistic and one analytic), agreed on the CEFR level of students’ writing performances. Both teams rated one hundred performances written by Austrian secondary school students based on two tasks. The Finnish raters (N = 3) applied a holistic CEFR-linked rating scale consisting of verbatim CEFR descriptors developed in Finland, while the Austrian team (N = 6) used an analytic CEFR-linked rating scale consisting of four criteria developed in Austria. The ratings were analysed using the Rasch model. Although there were individual differences in rater severity among both teams of raters, a clear pattern emerged from the data: The Austrian raters were slightly more lenient than the Finnish raters. Although there was a statistically significant difference in rater severity between the two groups, the actual scope of disagreement was small. Thus, overall, the two teams agreed to a large extent on the CEFR levels of the participants. peerReviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201905312886