Conference & Common Room - September 2018

Page 43

Look around

UKiset gets schools and international students off to a flying start Alastair Montgomery describes UKiset’s recent up-grade and seeks schools to trial the Thinking Skills Assessment at 16+ Thirteen thousand new international students will start in British independent schools this September. Essential to their success at their new school is their English language ability, and it is a huge benefit to have a good understanding of their abilities before they get started. Leading independent schools have been using UKiset to assess international applicants to British schools for the last four years. The UKiset model consists of a standardised reasoning test and a comprehensive English assessment in reading, listening and writing. The reasoning tests provide an impartial view on how an international student will cope with the academic rigour of a particular school. The results dovetail nicely with any internal baseline testing the school is already using. Due to increased demand for a greater insight into the English skills, UKiset has recently upgraded their English assessment in partnership with Cambridge Assessment. We have been looking forward to improving our English skills test for some time and we are delighted to be able to roll it out before the busy season takes off for early bird applications for sought-after places in September 2019. The English assessment will continue to provide schools with a language score on the Common European Framework for Languages (CEFR) from A1 to C1 or above. However, the new test provides two further pieces of valuable information. Firstly, a score on the standardised Cambridge English scale allows schools to see exactly how the ability compares to other assessments such as IELTS, and how close the candidate is to the next CEFR level. Secondly, the new results isolate reading ability and listening ability, providing a separate CEFR level and a scaled score for each skill. This extra level of accuracy is achieved using a computer-based online test that is only 15 minutes longer than the previous UKiset English test. The UKiset results reports will look slightly different. The new English section will include separate scores for reading and listening, plus an overall average. It will include a copy of the Cambridge English scale and equivalent competencies in other tests. As a result, schools using UKiset will have a much better idea of an applicant’s English level and more information to share with their English language support teams from the outset. The new scaled scores will help differentiate those higher-level candidates, providing further insight into the candidate’s readiness to study in the UK.

UKiset is working closely with the admissions testing team at Cambridge Assessment to help schools identify the most suitable students. With an increasing number of international students using British schools as a gateway to the top universities, Cambridge Assessment and UKiset are looking for schools willing to trial the Thinking Skills Assessment (TSA) at 16+ entry. TSA was developed for a number of top university courses at Oxford and Cambridge to assess critical thinking skills essential to studying at the highest level. It is a great opportunity for schools to measure these skills and identify these potential applicants. Paul Crump, Assessment Group

UKiset and TSA are looking ever-increasingly at the underlying skills that determine a student’s academic success. Manager at Cambridge Assessment Admissions Testing says ‘TSA assesses the higher-order skills of critical thinking and problem solving, widely recognised as important twentiethcentury skills and shown to be good predictors of success in a range of academic disciplines. It allows applicants from a wide range of educational backgrounds to demonstrate their potential, regardless of prior knowledge, and provides a common benchmark of the core skills required to thrive academically, both in years 12 and 13 and in higher education beyond.’ UKiset and TSA are looking ever-increasingly at the underlying skills that determine a student’s academic success. Admissions teams have new and improved ways of identifying the most suitable international students for their schools and colleges, using sophisticated measures. Using the right assessment to ensure a student can enter the British education system and hit the ground running is an essential part of the job. If you are interested in learning more about these tests and this collaboration contact alastair.montgomery@ukiset.com. Alastair Montgomery is the Director of UKiset

Autumn 2018

41


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Articles inside

Letter from America

8min
pages 61-64

Hereford Cathedral School: A History over 800 Years by Howard Tomlinson, reviewed by David Warnes

6min
pages 55-56

Hide fox, and all after, Joe Winter

8min
pages 53-54

Learning how to distinguish fake from fact, Karthik Krishnan

6min
pages 50-51

Fayke News by Derek J Taylor, reviewed by Neil Boulton

3min
page 52

Innovation and inspiration for Strathallan pipers, Heather Dewar

5min
pages 48-49

GSA Girls Go Gold Conferences, September 2018

3min
pages 46-47

Casting the net for future stars, Caroline Ritchie-Morgan

5min
pages 44-45

UKiset gets schools and international students off to a flying start

3min
page 43

Life after school: looking beyond university, Claire Granados

5min
pages 35-36

Career streams from STEAM Fair

5min
pages 39-40

Parental choice, Hugh Wright

7min
pages 41-42

Why TEF is good for students, Myles Smith and Laura Hughes

5min
pages 37-38

The route into medicine, Janice Liverseidge

5min
pages 33-34

No more jobs for life, Marina Gardiner Legge

5min
pages 31-32

Rethinking education for the age of automation, Rohit Talwar

8min
pages 29-30

Bridging the IT skills gap, Graham Smith

5min
pages 27-28

Better never stops, David King

4min
pages 7-8

What makes our girls so good at maths?, Donna Harris

13min
pages 19-22

Leavers’ Day, OR Houseman

7min
pages 23-24

Look out

8min
pages 25-26

GSA Heads look forward to the coming academic year

7min
pages 17-18

After GDPR – what happens next?, Steve Forbes

9min
pages 14-16

Tackling the ‘Brittle Bright’ problem, Will Ord

7min
pages 9-10

Editorial

7min
pages 5-6
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