2632-6779 (Print)
2633-6898 (Online)
Scopus
Ulrich’s Periodicals Directory (ProQuest)
MLA International Bibliography
MLA Directory of Periodicals
Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)
QOAM (Quality Open Access Market)
British National Bibliography
WAC Clearinghouse Journal Listings
EBSCO Education
ICI Journals Master List
ERIH PLUS
CNKI Scholar
Gale-Cengage
WorldCat
Crossref
Baidu Scholar
British Library
J-Gate
ROAD
BASE
Publons
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
ORE Directory
TIRF
China National Center for Philosophy and Social Sciences Documentation
Zari Saeedi
Allameh Tabataba'i University, Iran
Zia Tajeddin
Tarbiat Modares University, Iran
Fereshteh Tadayon
Allameh Tabataba'i University, Iran
Abstract
Despite the burgeoning interest in English as a Lingua Franca (ELF), there is scant research on the principles that can inform ELF assessment. To address this gap, this mixed-methods research synthesis sought to review and synthesize relevant studies on ELF to outline principles that can serve as a basis for ELF assessment, including test domains, dimensions, and rating rubrics. We drew on three main inclusion criteria to select relevant studies (a) published as journal articles, book chapters, or conference proceedings, (b) appearing during the period from 2000 to 2023, and (c) focused on ELF assessment. The search yielded 58 studies for this research synthesis. Findings revealed nine main principles that can underpin test domains (Using ELF corpora, Prioritizing ELF local context, and Measuring ELF multidimensional competence), test dimensions (Test accommodation, ELFinformed tasks), and rating rubrics (Discipline-informed rating rubric, Nonnative English speakers as raters, Strategy use, and Intelligible pronunciation). Implications are discussed for test developers’ awareness of ELF principles that can inform test construct definition, operationalization, and rating criteria.
Keywords
English as a Lingua Franca (ELF), ELF assessment, test domains, test dimensions, rating rubrics, research synthesis