DocumentCode
2749940
Title
Introducing alternative assessment into engineering language education at the Technical University of Madrid
Author
McMahon, Joana Pierce ; Escribano, Pilar Duran ; Mansilla, Paloma Ubeda
Author_Institution
Dept. of Appl. Linguistics, Tech. Univ. of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
fYear
2010
fDate
14-16 April 2010
Firstpage
1647
Lastpage
1651
Abstract
Engineering Institutions across Europe are currently involved in a major process of reform and restructuring as part of the Bologna Process, which stresses the role of competencies and outcomes in curriculum design. In the field of languages, the Council of Europe has developed the Common European Framework of References for Languages (CEFR), which aims to provide a reference framework for describing different qualifications, identifying different language learning objectives and setting out the basis of different achievement standards. Using this framework of language competence levels, our research group, over a three year period, has developed and piloted the Academic and Professional English Language Portfolio (ACPEL) especially designed for Engineering students and professionals. This portfolio was accredited by Language division of the Council of Europe in 2008. This paper will report on an ongoing project dealing with self and peer assessment based on the ACPEL portfolio. The project´s aim is threefold: first, to train university language professionals in the use of self and peer assessment through the implementation of the ACPEL portfolio; secondly, to gradually introduce these assessment processes into the engineering language curriculum and finally to monitor and evaluate these two processes at the seven engineering schools.
Keywords
educational courses; educational institutions; engineering education; qualifications; Bologna process; Common European Framework of References for Languages; Council of Europe; Technical University of Madrid; academic and professional english language portfolio; achievement standards; curriculum design; engineering institutions; engineering language curriculum; engineering language education; language competence levels; language division; language learning objectives; peer assessment; qualifications; university language professionals; Councils; Design engineering; Engineering students; Europe; Monitoring; Natural languages; Portfolios; Qualifications; Standards development; Stress; assessment; higher education; second language; self assessment;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Education Engineering (EDUCON), 2010 IEEE
Conference_Location
Madrid
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-6568-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-6570-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/EDUCON.2010.5492399
Filename
5492399
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