Modern Language Aptitude Test
The Modern Language Aptitude Test was designed to predict a student’s likelihood of success and ease in learning a foreign language.
The Modern Language Aptitude Test (MLAT) was developed to measure foreign language learning aptitude. Language learning aptitude does not refer to whether or not an individual can or cannot learn a foreign language (it is assumed that virtually everyone can learn a foreign language given adequate opportunity. According to John Carroll and Stanley Sapon, the authors of the MLAT, language learning aptitude does refer to the “prediction of how well, relative to other individuals, an individual can learn a foreign language in a given amount of time and under given conditions.” The MLAT has primarily been used for adults in government language programs and missionaries, but it is also appropriate for students in grades 9 to 12 as well as college/university students so it is also used by private schools and school and clinical psychologists. Similar tests have been created for younger age groups. For example, the Pimsleur Language Aptitude Battery was designed for junior high and high school students while the MLAT-E is for children in grades 3 through 6.
Education Assessment and Evaluation
- Accreditation
- Bell Curve Grading
- Challenge Index
- Computer-Adaptive Test
- Course Evaluation
- Dynamic Assessment
- E-assessment
- Educational Evaluation
- Educational Testing Service
- Eights System
- Free Response
- Modern Language Aptitude Test
- Multiple Choice
- National Latin Examination
- Nines System
- Pimsleur Language Aptitude Battery
- Plagiarism
- Praxis Test
- Standardized Testing
- Standards-based Assessment
- Tens System






