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PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT

PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT. What is Performance Assessment?. One in which a teacher observes and makes a judgment about the student’s demonstration of a skill or competency in creating a product, constructing a response, or making a presentation.

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PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT

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  1. PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT

  2. What is Performance Assessment? • One in which a teacher observes and makes a judgment about the student’s demonstration of a skill or competency in creating a product, constructing a response, or making a presentation. • Emphasis on student’s ability to perform tasks by producing their own work with their knowledge and skills. • Examples: singing, playing a piano, performing gymnastics or completed paper, project

  3. Characteristics of Performance Assessment • Students perform, create, construct, produce, or do something • Deep understanding and/or reasoning skills are needed and assessed • Involves sustained work, often days • Calls on students to explain, justify and defend • Involves engaging ideas of importance and substance • Relies on trained assessor’s judgments for scoring • Multiple criteria and standards are prespecified • No single “correct” answer

  4. Strengths & Weaknesses of Performance Assessments

  5. PROCESS-ORIENTED PERFORMANCE-BASED ASSESSMENT

  6. It is important to assess students’ learning not only through their outputs or products but also the processes which the students underwent in order to arrive at these products or outputs.

  7. Learning entails not only what students know but what they can do with what they know. • It involves knowledge, abilities, values, attitudes and habits of mind that affect academic success and performance beyond the classroom.

  8. Process-Oriented Learning Competencies • Information about outcomes is important. To improve outcomes, we need to know about student experience along the way - about the curricula, teaching, and kind of students that lead to particular outcomes.

  9. Assessment can help us understand which students learn best under what conditions; which such knowledge comes the capacity to improve the whole of their learning. • Process-oriented performance-based assessment is concerned with the actual task performance rather than the output or product of the activity.

  10. Learning Competencies • Competencies are defined as groups or clusters of skills and abilities needed for a particular task. • The objectives focus on the behaviors which exemplify “best practice” for the particular task. • Such behavior range from a “beginner” or novice level up to the level of expert.

  11. Example • Task: Recite a Poem by Edgar Allan Poe, “The Raven” • Objectives: to enable the students to recite a poem entitled “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe.

  12. Specifically: • Recite the poem from memory without referring to notes; • Use appropriate hand and body gestures in delivering the piece; • Maintain eye contact with the audience while reciting the poem; • Create ambiance of the poem through appropriate rising and falling intonation; • Pronounce the words clearly and with proper diction.

  13. The specific objectives identified constitute the learning competencies for this particular task. • Examples of simple competencies: • Speak with a well-modulated voice • Draw a straight line from one point to another point • Color a leaf with a green crayon

  14. Examples of complex competencies • Recite a poem with feeling using appropriate voice quality, facial expression and hand gestures • Construct an equilateral triangle given three non-collinear points • Draw and color a leaf with green crayon

  15. Task Designing Standards for designing a task • Identifying an activity that would highlight the competencies to be evaluated. • Identifying an activity that would entail more or less the same sets of competencies. • Finding a task that would be interesting and enjoyable for the students.

  16. Example • Topic: Understanding biological diversity • Possible Task Design • bring the students to the pond or creek • Ask them to find all living organisms near the pond or creek • Bring them to school playground to find as may living organisms they can find Observe how the students will develop a system for finding such organisms, classifying the organisms and concluding the differences in biological diversity of the two sites.

  17. Scoring Rubrics • Rubric is a scoring scale used to assess student performance along a task-specific set of criteria. • Authentic assessment are criterion-referenced measures; • A student’s aptitude on a task is determined by matching the student’s performance against a set of criteria to determine the degree to which the student’s performance meets the criteria for the task.

  18. Example

  19. Descriptors Descriptors spell out what is expected of students at each level of performance for each criterion. It tells students what performance looks like at each level and how their work may be distinguished from the work of others for each criterion.

  20. Why include levels of performance? • Clearer expectations • Students know what is expected of them and teachers know what to look for in student’s performance. • Students better understand what good performance on the task looks like if levels of performance are identified.

  21. More consistent and objective assessment • Better feedback • Analytic versus holistic rubrics An analytic rubric articulates levels of performance for each criterion so that teacher can assess students performance on each criterion. Holistic rubric does not list separate levels of performance for each criterion. Instead, it assigns a level of performance across multiple criteria as a whole.

  22. Example of Analytic Scoring Rubric (for a Writing Sample) Objective: Write a character study

  23. Example of Holistic Rubric Objective: Write a paper to persuade the reader to accept clearly defined point of view and course of action

  24. When to choose an analytic rubric • For assignments that involve a larger number of criteria • When to use holistic rubric? • When a quick or gross judgment needs to be made • If the assignment is a minor one such as brief assignment (e.g. check, check-plus, or no check) to quickly review student work.

  25. How many levels of performance should I include in my Rubric? • No specific number of levels • Will vary depending on the task and your needs • Start with at least three levels and then expand if necessary. Example:

  26. Exercises • For each of the following tasks, identify at least three process-oriented learning competencies. • Constructing an angle using a straight edge and a compass • Writing an essay about EDSA I • Performing a play on the importance of national language • Role to illustrate the concept of Filipino family values • Constructing three-dimensional models of solids from card boards

  27. Choose any 5 activities and construct your own scoring rubrics • Devise a game • Participate in a debate • Write a research paper • Design a museum exhibit • Evaluate the quality of a writer’s argument • Write a summary of an article • Compare and contrast two stories or articles • Draw conclusion from a text

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