Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety

Despite its pedagogical benefits such as time-efficiency, uniformity, prompt feedback and reporting, computerised oral testing (COT) in languages other than English is nevertheless underutilized in the context of Japanese teaching and learning at the Australian university level. After a pilot study...

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Main Authors: Chen, Julian, Hasegawa, Hiroshi, Collopy, Teagan
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2020
Online Access:https://www.hltmag.co.uk/dec20/computerised-or-face-to-face-oral-testing
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/82039
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author Chen, Julian
Hasegawa, Hiroshi
Collopy, Teagan
author_facet Chen, Julian
Hasegawa, Hiroshi
Collopy, Teagan
author_sort Chen, Julian
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Despite its pedagogical benefits such as time-efficiency, uniformity, prompt feedback and reporting, computerised oral testing (COT) in languages other than English is nevertheless underutilized in the context of Japanese teaching and learning at the Australian university level. After a pilot study on the effectiveness of the COT delivery, the Japanese tutor’s critical reflection was investigated further via a follow-up survey and semi-structured interview. This reflective article reports on the tutor’s perspective as a COT assessor, its impact on students’ oral test performance including learner anxiety and administrative benefits, compared to her past experiences in employing the traditional face-to-face (F2F) oral interview test. The article concludes with the best practices and lessons learned from this COT approach that can be applied to other foreign language oral assessments using COT at the tertiary level.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:19:44Z
publishDate 2020
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-820392021-02-01T05:45:32Z Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety Chen, Julian Hasegawa, Hiroshi Collopy, Teagan Despite its pedagogical benefits such as time-efficiency, uniformity, prompt feedback and reporting, computerised oral testing (COT) in languages other than English is nevertheless underutilized in the context of Japanese teaching and learning at the Australian university level. After a pilot study on the effectiveness of the COT delivery, the Japanese tutor’s critical reflection was investigated further via a follow-up survey and semi-structured interview. This reflective article reports on the tutor’s perspective as a COT assessor, its impact on students’ oral test performance including learner anxiety and administrative benefits, compared to her past experiences in employing the traditional face-to-face (F2F) oral interview test. The article concludes with the best practices and lessons learned from this COT approach that can be applied to other foreign language oral assessments using COT at the tertiary level. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/82039 https://www.hltmag.co.uk/dec20/computerised-or-face-to-face-oral-testing fulltext
spellingShingle Chen, Julian
Hasegawa, Hiroshi
Collopy, Teagan
Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
title Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
title_full Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
title_fullStr Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
title_full_unstemmed Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
title_short Computerized or face-to-face oral testing? A tutor’s critical reflection of Japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
title_sort computerized or face-to-face oral testing? a tutor’s critical reflection of japanese beginners’ test experience and learner anxiety
url https://www.hltmag.co.uk/dec20/computerised-or-face-to-face-oral-testing
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/82039