NEW YORK STATE ENGLISH AS A
SECOND LANGUAGE TEST
(NYSESLAT)
GRADES 5-6
TEST SPECIFICATIONS
WITH LINKS TO STANDARDS
Updated October 30, 2003
Prepared
by Educational Testing Service
Copyright
© 2003 Educational Testing Service.
Unauthorized
reproduction is strictly prohibited.
WRITING
SPEAKING
READING
LISTENING
Number
of Writing Tasks: 3
Task
Types are:
The 5-6 Writing exercises are scored holistically using a 0-1-2-3 point rating scale.
Scoring Task Type 1:
Prewriting for a story/essay
Score |
Characteristics of
Students Responses |
|
3 |
|
|
2 |
|
|
1 |
Responses are
general and may lack development or insight into the topic; however, the
responses show some understanding of the task. |
|
0 |
Scoring Task Type 2: Writing
the story/essay
Score |
Characteristics of
Students Responses |
|
4 |
The student’s response:
|
|
3 |
The student’s response:
|
|
2 |
The student’s response:
|
|
1 |
The student’s response:
|
|
0 |
The student’s response is not recognizable as
written English, does not address the question at all, or is completely
irrelevant or incoherent. |
Task Type
3: Editing a piece of writing
SCORE |
Number of Errors the Student Corrects Properly |
|
3 |
10 - 12 |
|
2 |
6 – 9 |
|
1 |
3 – 5 |
|
0 |
0 - 2 |
SPEAKING
Number
of Test Questions: 5
Task
Types for Students:
o Narrate a story based on a 4-picture sequence*
o Describe and interpret information in a chart or
graph*
o Give directions based on a map
o Express an opinion or explain a personal preference
o Ask appropriate questions in school or social situations
o Provide information and assistance
o Explain actions, choices, and decisions
o Make an argument/speak persuasively
o Make a comparison/contrast
*
Asterisked item types will appear in each form.
SCORING THE SPEAKING TASKS
The 5-6 Speaking tasks are scored holistically using a 0-1-2-3 point rating scale. The administrator of the tasks scores each task after the student has finished speaking.
SCORING GUIDE FOR GRADES 5-6 SPEAKING
SPEAKING 3-2-1-0 SCALE
Score |
Characteristics of Student Responses |
|
3 |
The student’s
response:
|
|
2 |
The student’s
response:
|
|
1 |
The student’s
response:
|
|
0 |
The student gives
no response, gives a response that cannot be understood as English, or does
not demonstrate an understanding of English. |
Number
of Questions: 25
Task
Types for Students:
o Reading comprehension
passages with multiple-choice questions.
o Passage Types
·
Fiction/Literary
(1-3
passages)
·
Graphic
(1-2 passages)
·
Non-fiction
(1-3
passages)
o Question Types That Must Be Represented:
·
Main
Idea/Topic Summary
·
Detail/Fact
·
Vocabulary
·
Sequence
of Events/Process
·
Inference/Prediction
·
Reference/Antecedent
·
Cause/Effect
·
Interpretation
·
Literary
Elements such as Plot, Character, or Setting
o Question Types That Will Also Be Represented, as Appropriate:
·
Author’s
Purpose
·
Literary/Genre
·
Fact
versus Opinion
Note on Passage Types:
Among
the nonfiction, fiction, and graphic passages, test item writers and test
assemblers are encouraged to include passages that reflect cultural patterns
and norms in the United States and /or the cultures and perspectives of
immigrants to the United States.
Note on Answers:
Students
mark their answers on a multiple-choice answer sheet.
LISTENING
Number of Test Questions: 24
Stimulus Types:
· Picture Description (4-8 Questions)
·
Informative/Academic (6-8
Questions)
·
Literary Text (2-4
Questions)
· Social Interaction (8-12 Questions)
Question
Types:
·
Matching
Statements with Pictures (at least 4 questions)
·
Listening for Main Ideas
(at
least 4 questions)
·
Listening for Details (at
least 6 questions)
· Making Inferences/Predictions (at least 3 questions)
Notes:
Stimulus material for the Listening test is presented on an audiotape. Students mark their answers on a multiple-choice answer sheet.
|
New York ESL Learning Standards |
Task/Item Types |
|
Standard 1: English for information and understanding. |
Writing – Prewriting, writing the story/essay, editing Speaking – Narrate a story based on a picture sequence, describe and interpret
information in a chart or graph, give directions based on a map, make a
comparison/contrast Reading – Nonfiction passages in everyday or academic
language, passages presenting information in a graphically organized form
(including charts, graphs, maps, and calendars), inference, sequence of
events or stages in a process, compare, contrast, categorize information,
vocabulary Listening –Informative/academic, matching statements with
pictures, listening selectively for a specific purpose, listening for main
ideas, listening for details, making
inferences/predictions |
|
Standard 2: English for literary response, enjoyment, and
expression. |
Reading – Stories or excerpts from fiction and/or poems,
literary elements, such as plot, character, setting, or theme, predictions or
inferences based on literary works, interpretation of literary meaning,
literary genres Listening – Literary text, listening for main ideas,
listening for details, making
inferences/predictions |
|
Standard 3: English for critical analysis and
evaluation. |
Writing – Writing the story/essay Speaking – Make an argument/speak persuasively Reading – Main idea, facts or details, author’s purpose,
understand syntax, referents, and antecedents Listening – Making
inferences/predictions based on in spoken text |
|
Standard 4: English for classroom and social interaction. |
Speaking – Ask appropriate questions in school or social
situations, provide information and assistance, explain actions, choices, and
decisions, express an opinion or explain a personal preference Listening – Social interaction |
|
Standard 5: English for cross-cultural knowledge and understanding. |
Reading – Passages that reflect cultural patterns and
norms in the United States and/or of the cultures and perspectives of
immigrants to the United States |