Abstract :
In recent years language testers have taken a critical interest in the use of
tests. Motivated by the notion of consequential validity (traceable to Messick, 1989),
there has been an active debate about how far language testers should become
involved in questions of test use and ethics (Davies, 1997a, 1997b). The judgment
appears to be that these are issues language testers cannot ignore (Davies, 2008). For
example, there is concern about the surreptitious use of language tests by states to
achieve political goals (Fulcher, 2004, 2008; Shohamy, 2001a), or as tools in
immigration policy to achieve ends that would otherwise appear illiberal (McNamara,
2005, 2008). The “meaning” of a test is being conceptualized either in terms of its role
in policy (McNamara & Roever, 2006), where the test is usually co-opted into service
for which it was not designed (Fulcher & Davidson, 2009), or in terms of its intended
effects on stakeholders (Davidson and Fulcher, 2006; Fulcher & Davidson, 2007).