Standardised Testing among Children learning English as an Additional Language (EAL) in Ireland: Normative and exclusionary practices.

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2024Access:
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Fitzsimons, P.; Mc Daid, R.; Share, M., Standardised Testing among Children learning English as an Additional Language (EAL) in Ireland: Normative and exclusionary practices., REACH: Journal of Inclusive Education in Ireland, 2024Abstract:
Standardised testing has become an increasingly prominent feature in
education policy. In Ireland, standardised tests in literacy and numeracy are
compulsory for all pupils, with few exceptions, in second, fourth and sixth
classes and results of the tests are employed in increasingly powerful ways
by the Department of Education. In addition to deleterious effects such as
narrowing the curriculum and teaching to the test, there is an increasing body
of literature concerned with the impact of standardised tests on pupils. This
is particularly acute for children from minoritised ethnic backgrounds and
those learning English as an Additional Language. This critical quantitative
inquiry examined the standardised testing of five cohorts of children
learning English as an Additional Language (EAL) as they progressed
through a junior and senior primary school in Ireland. Data are drawn
from standardised tests scores of literacy, numeracy, verbal and non-verbal
intelligence. Findings include that the performance of the EAL children was
lower on all tests of verbal intelligence compared to the non-EAL groups.
This difference remained consistent as they progressed from junior to senior
primary school. No pattern of difference was identifiable between the groups
on ‘non-verbal’ reasoning tests. These findings have important implications
for educational professionals and policy makers including that these tests may
be inappropriate for EAL children and that the interpretation and reporting
of results needs to be qualified.
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REACH: Journal of Inclusive Education in Ireland;Availability:
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Inclusive Society , Educational Evaluation/Assessment , Inclusive EducationMetadata
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