ABSTRACT

This edited volume examines how transnational English language assessment practices are envisioned, enacted, and justified by different stakeholders, including students, teachers, and universities in different geographical contexts, and what would be the multi-level consequences of such practices.

Bringing together diverse perspectives from across the Global South and Global North, the book argues that the field of English language assessment has always been transnational, despite an absence of a research that explicitly examines English language assessment practices in relation to transnationalism. The contribution of this volume lies in filling in this critical scholarly gap. Through a wide set of epistemological, theoretical, and pedagogical interventions along with methodological orientations and analytical frameworks, the chapter authors question the social, economic, political, linguistic, and pedagogical consequences of transnational English language assessment practices in higher education (HE) settings and contexts.

Offering fresh perspectives on English language assessment practices in relation to transnationalism, this book will be of great interest to researchers, academics, and post-graduate students in the fields of applied linguistics, Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), and language assessment more broadly.

part I|44 pages

Historical and theoretical foundations

part III|62 pages

Transnational assessment in English writing skills

chapter 1088|21 pages

Genre-based Writing Classroom Assessment

Pedagogically Responsive Classroom Assessment Practices for Transnational L2 Contexts

chapter 10|16 pages

Investment and Praxis in Asset-based Assessment

Exploring Transnational Identity and Perspectives for Academic English Writing Pedagogy

part IV|91 pages

Assessment in English medium instruction programs in a transnational context

chapter 17011|18 pages

The Elephant in the Room

Language Assessment in English-medium Education in Multilingual University Settings

chapter 12|15 pages

Neoliberal Ideologies in Teaching and Assessing ESP Legal English

A Case Study from the Middle East