Performance Standards for the CELPIP-General LS Speaking Test – Explanation
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Performance Standards for the CELPIP-General LS Speaking Test - Explanation
The Performance Standards chart is designed to help you understand how your Speaking skills are measured by our trained and certified raters. The raters determine your skill level in each of the four categories. Here are the guiding questions that they must keep in mind as they rate your work:
- 1) COHERENCE/MEANING
This category measures how smoothly and effectively the ideas flow together to form a meaningful and coherent whole.
- Are there enough ideas, and have they been explained clearly?
- Are the ideas well organized so that the listener can easily follow what is being said?
- Can the test taker express precise meaning and/or explore deeper levels of meaning?
- 2) VOCABULARY
This category assesses how well the test taker uses vocabulary, idioms and phrases to make his/her ideas understandable.
- Is the range of words sufficient to complete the task?
- How well is the test taker using words that help express precise ideas clearly with minimal pausing and hesitation?
- Can the test taker combine words to express precise meaning?
- 3) LISTENABILITY
This category measures how intelligible and fluent your speaking is.
- How much do problems with rhythm, pronunciation and intonation interfere with listenability?
- How fluent is the response (listen for hesitations, interjections, and/or self-correction)?
- Does the test taker’s control of grammar and syntax interfere with or improve listenability?
- Is there complexity and variety in the sentence structure?
- 4) TASK FULFILLMENT
This category considers how well the content of the response addresses the task requirements. In other words, has the test taker understood the instructions and done everything he or she was asked to do?
- How well does the response address the task?
- How complete is the response?
- Is the tone of the response appropriate for the social context of the task?
- Is the response long enough?
The four category ratings from one rater are combined into one score for that task. One rater scores four of your responses, and a second rater scores the other four. The eight task scores are combined into one overall score for your Speaking skills.