 |
About the Book
About the Authors
Glenn Fulcher ¦ Fred Davidson
Glenn
Fulcher is originally from Lancashire
in the United Kingdom. He studied philosophy and theology at King's
College London, in which he earned undergraduate and postgraduate
degrees. As part of his studies at London, he was involved in an
exchange programme that took him to study philosophy and linguistics
at Dartmouth
College, New Hampshire. It was this exchange that first that
gave him a taste for Applied Linguistics, and his first masters
degree employed structural linguistics in the analysis of Greek
texts. He also studied Education at the Christ's
College Cambridge, before going overseas to become a teacher
of English as a Second Language. His longest appointment was at
the English
School, Cyprus, where he was Director of Studies. After doing
this for a number of years, he took a second masters in Applied
English Linguistics at the University
of Birmingham, and then went on to research for a PhD in Language
Testing and Assessment at the University
of Lancaster. He has taught Applied Linguistics and Language
Testing in a number of UK Universities, and is currently Senior
Lecturer in Education (TESOL) at the University
of Leicester, School
of Education, Centre
for Language Teacher Education and Applied Linguistics.
His main interests lie in the field of language testing and the
philosophy of educational assessment, including validity theory,
construct operationalization, and task design. He also takes a keen
interest in research methodology and statistics in testing and applied
linguistics research, and has worked in the fields of Second Language
Acquisition, Discourse Analysis, lexis, CALL, teaching and methodology.
He has extensive experience of test development and design, and
has been involved in a number of large-scale testing operations.
For example, from 2001 to 2005 he was a Member of the TOEFL
Committee of Examiners and was Chair of the TOEFL Research Subcommittee
from 2003 to 2005.
In 2006 he was President of the International Language Testing
Association (ILTA www.iltaonline.com),
and had previously served on the Executive Board of ILTA as a Member
at Large, and Vice President. He is also an expert member of the
European Association of Language Testing and Assessment (EALTA www.ealta.eu.org/expert-members.php).
He is currently on the Editorial Boards of the journals Language
Testing (Sage) and Assessing Writing (Elsevier), and
reviews for a number of other journals. From January 2007 until
December 2011 he is co-editor of Language Testing, with
Cathie Elder (Melbourne University).
More information about Glenn is available on his website.
Fred
Davidson is a native of Chicago,
Illinois, USA. During secondary school, he became very involved
in competitive public speaking and theatre. This led him to the
University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) for his undergraduate work, leading
to an Illinois teaching certificate in English and Speech (and by
implication, theatre). Instead of a career in the schools, Fred
joined the United
States Peace Corps, where he taught English language arts and
science in Ziah Town, Konobo District, Grand
Gedeh County, Liberia.
He next returned to UIUC to pursue a Master's in Teaching
English as a Second Language. A doctorate in applied linguistics
followed from the University
of California at Los Angeles. He next worked for the University
of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate – when, if his
memory serves rightly, he first met Glenn Fulcher. Another post-doctoral
year's job followed, back in the USA at the Illinois
State Board of Education and the Illinois
Resource Center. Finally, in 1990, he joined the faculty of
the same unit where he earlier earned his Master's degree:
the Division
of English as an International Language at UIUC, where he continues
to work.
Fred's main interests include language assessment, research
design and statistics for applied linguistics, and the history and
philosophy of educational and psychological measurement. He has
worked in a number of language test development projects and related
research initiatives, and has supervised various teams of graduate
student test developers as well as (of this writing) twenty-four
doctoral dissertations and twenty-three M.A. theses.
He is past-President of ILTA (2002), and he has served on a number
of advisory committees including the Board for the Test
of English as a Foreign Language. He serves on the Editorial
Boards of two journals: Language Testing and Language
Assessment Quarterly.
Fred remains vitally interested in the ongoing challenges facing
Liberia, and he is a member of Friends
of Liberia and of an organziation of returned Peace Corps Volunteers
and allied friends: the NPCA.
More information about Fred is available at his website.
|
 |