Felipe Almuna-Salgado & Caroline Bardini
The incorporation of contextualised tasks has been highly recommended by reform documents and curricula. Nevertheless, the role that task context plays in assessments is an unsolved matter because there are arguments relate to whether it makes a task easier or harder for students. This study represents an attempt to scrutinise to what extent the nature of demand of the second-order use of context may affect students’ performance on literacy tasks. It is anticipated that this study can provide a deeper understanding of how task context impacts students’ performance, thereby contributing to the improvement of contextualised assessments among teachers, policy makers, and assessment writers.