| dc.description.abstract |
Primary school educators in South Africa often experience difficulties in applying recommended adaptive assessment
methods in large multilingual classes, with these challenges being exacerbated when teaching and assessing English as First
Additional Language (EFAL). In this article, we report on a study that explored Grade 6 educators’ knowledge and use of
adaptive assessment methods when teaching EFAL. The national Policy on Screening, Identification, Assessment and
Support ([SIAS] Department of Basic Education [DBE], Republic of South Africa [RSA], 2014) underpins our study as a
theoretical framework. We followed a qualitative research approach to examine the knowledge as well as the classroom
practices of 6 purposively selected educators who taught EFAL. The study was grounded in the interpretivist paradigm and
investigated educators’ lived experiences integrating adaptive assessment procedures into the teaching of EFAL in Grade 6
inclusive classrooms. We relied on semi-structured interviews, observation, and document analysis to collect data and
performed thematic analysis to identify, analyse and report repeated patterns. The findings from our study indicate that the
participating educators perceived their training in inclusive education and their use of adaptive assessment methods as
inadequate, especially in the context of large, under-resourced classrooms. As a result, we recommend that educators should
receive the necessary support from the school-based support teams and the district-based support teams to use adaptive
assessment methods when teaching EFAL.
Keywords: adaptations; assessment; barriers to learning; English First Additional Language; inclusive classrooms; Policy on
Screening, Identification, Assessment and Support (SIAS) |
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