Item Writing and Dyslexic Students

In language testing, item writing is an important process which can be creative, rewarding but also challenging and sometimes frustrating. Quality items are fundamental for test validity and item writers can be formally trained in order to improve what they write (Rossi and Brunfaut 2019). The pres...

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Main Author: Margherita Pelleriti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona 2023-06-01
Series:Iperstoria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iperstoria.it/article/view/1285
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author Margherita Pelleriti
author_facet Margherita Pelleriti
author_sort Margherita Pelleriti
collection DOAJ
description In language testing, item writing is an important process which can be creative, rewarding but also challenging and sometimes frustrating. Quality items are fundamental for test validity and item writers can be formally trained in order to improve what they write (Rossi and Brunfaut 2019). The present study analyses some items specifically written for dyslexic students as part of a high-stakes, Internet-based B1 English test administered to undergraduate students in an Italian university, namely the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, where the number of dyslexic students enrolled has increased exponentially in recent years. The aim was to investigate whether the accommodations suggested by the item reviewer succeeded in removing unnecessary barriers which represent an unintended bias, while preserving the test construct and consequently its validity (Pelleriti 2018; Kormos and Smith 2012). For the present investigation, a questionnaire was devised, and four certified dyslexic students were interviewed on a voluntary basis. The data collected during the semi-structured interviews confirmed that some of the suggested accommodations would be beneficial, whereas others would be detrimental to candidates with dyslexia. As a consequence, some conclusions have been drawn, with the aim of sharing best practice among the language testing community—in particular language testers, test developers, and item writers. Nevertheless, this research has also confirmed that item writing undoubtedly deserves more scholarly attention, in an attempt to shed light on this pivotal aspect, which is at times neglected despite being one of the pillars in language testing.
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spelling doaj.art-7f6a464d081c463c8d855afbc49b90262023-06-28T09:45:39ZengDepartment of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of VeronaIperstoria2281-45822023-06-012110.13136/2281-4582/2023.i21.12851236Item Writing and Dyslexic StudentsMargherita PelleritiIn language testing, item writing is an important process which can be creative, rewarding but also challenging and sometimes frustrating. Quality items are fundamental for test validity and item writers can be formally trained in order to improve what they write (Rossi and Brunfaut 2019). The present study analyses some items specifically written for dyslexic students as part of a high-stakes, Internet-based B1 English test administered to undergraduate students in an Italian university, namely the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, where the number of dyslexic students enrolled has increased exponentially in recent years. The aim was to investigate whether the accommodations suggested by the item reviewer succeeded in removing unnecessary barriers which represent an unintended bias, while preserving the test construct and consequently its validity (Pelleriti 2018; Kormos and Smith 2012). For the present investigation, a questionnaire was devised, and four certified dyslexic students were interviewed on a voluntary basis. The data collected during the semi-structured interviews confirmed that some of the suggested accommodations would be beneficial, whereas others would be detrimental to candidates with dyslexia. As a consequence, some conclusions have been drawn, with the aim of sharing best practice among the language testing community—in particular language testers, test developers, and item writers. Nevertheless, this research has also confirmed that item writing undoubtedly deserves more scholarly attention, in an attempt to shed light on this pivotal aspect, which is at times neglected despite being one of the pillars in language testing.https://iperstoria.it/article/view/1285accommodationsdyslexic studentsitem writinglanguage testingvalidity
spellingShingle Margherita Pelleriti
Item Writing and Dyslexic Students
Iperstoria
accommodations
dyslexic students
item writing
language testing
validity
title Item Writing and Dyslexic Students
title_full Item Writing and Dyslexic Students
title_fullStr Item Writing and Dyslexic Students
title_full_unstemmed Item Writing and Dyslexic Students
title_short Item Writing and Dyslexic Students
title_sort item writing and dyslexic students
topic accommodations
dyslexic students
item writing
language testing
validity
url https://iperstoria.it/article/view/1285
work_keys_str_mv AT margheritapelleriti itemwritinganddyslexicstudents