A Holistic Model of English Lesson-Unit Assessment for Junior High School Students

Desi Rochmawati

Abstract


Assessment in the learning process is very important. It is useful to know whether the teaching and learning process succeed or not. It can help to identify the students‘ achievement. An assessment is usually done by teachers and it covers the three aspects; knowledge, skills, and attitude (social and spiritual). In accordance with curriculum 2013, this study develops the model of assessment which is simpler and integrated. Moreover, teachers right now have many things to do related with administration affairs and other portfolios. They do not want to be burdened with some kinds of evaluation or assessment forms which will take too much of their time. This study, therefore, is aimed at designing a holistic model of assessment, which is designed for the unit lesson. The model is a holistic assessment model. In the model, Core Competence 1 (CC1) and Core Competence 2 (CC2) are not indicated explicitly because they are integrated in Core Competence 3 (CC3) and Core Competence 4 (CC4). The data were collected by having group discussion and sharing a questionnaire to the students in English Language Studies. The result of this study is a holistic model of assessment to assess Junior High School students‘ achievement in learning English. This model of assessment is designed especially to assess students‘ achievement in every unit lesson. The model is presented in a table with likert scale scoring of 1 to 4. Some explanation is also needed in certain points. The assessment is conducted by the students, they do self-assessment and peer assessment. The teacher does portfolio assessment of the student‘s work. A Holistic Assessment for Junior High School is the appropriate form because in the model, a holistic approach has been implemented: the contents are not too complex but they already represent the whole competence.


Keywords


attitude, assessment, core competence, holistic, knowledge, skill

Full Text:

PDF

References


Briggs, Mary., Woodfield, Angela., Martin, Cynthia, & Swatton, Peter (2003). Assessment for learning and teaching in primary schools (2nd edition). Great Britain: Bell & Bain, Ltd.

Akubuilo, Francis (2012). Holistic assessment of student’s learning outcome. Journal of Education and Practice. Vol. 3, No. 12.

Cronbach, L, J. and Meehl, P.E. (1955). Construct validity in psychological tests. Psychological Bulletin 52, 281-302.

Guidelines for Developing Assessment Tools, Swinburne University of Technology TAFE, viewed November 9 2014. www.tafe.swin.edu.au/sdg/quality.

Mitchell, Alison & Harland, Jo. (2011). Guidance for centers: Scottish vocational qualifications. UK: Pearson Education Limited.

Harris, Michael and McCann, Paul. (1994). Handbooks for the English classroom (assessment). Oxford: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd.

Wragg, E.C. (2001). Assessment and learning in the primary school. London: Routledge.

Dokumen kurikulum 2013 (http://englishahkam.blogspot. com/2013/09/download-silabus- smpmts-bahasa-inggris-kurikulum- 2013-lengkap.html).




DOI: https://doi.org/10.24071/ijels.v1i1.337

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


    

 

IJELS Journal Sinta 4 Certificate (S4 = Level 4)

We would like to inform you that Indonesian Journal of English Language Studies (IJELS) has been nationally accredited Sinta 4 by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia based on the decree  No. Surat Keputusan 152/E/KPT/2023. Validity for 5 years: Vol 7 No 2, 2021 till Vol 12 No 1, 2026

 

 

This work is licensed under CC BY-SA.

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

 

 

IJELS e-ISSN 2715-0895IJELS p-ISSN 2442-790X

Indonesian Journal of English Language Studies (IJELS) is published twice a year, namely in March and September, by the English Language Studies (ELS) of the Graduate Program of Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.