Lesson 3: Performance Assessment
Lesson 3: Performance Assessment
Lesson 3: Performance Assessment
Performance
Assessment
WMSU
CPERS Assessment in Learning 2
Significant Culminating Performance Task and
Success Indicators
At the end of the lesson, you should be able to
demonstrate your knowledge and skills in developing
performance assessment tools that are most applicable to
a particular student outcome. You are considered
successful in this culminating performance task if you
have satisfied the following indicators of success.
Performance Tasks Success Indicators
Identify the appropriate
Knowing the various types of
performance assessment tool
performance assessment
for a specific performance or
tools
product.
Create a performance
assessment tool that is aligned
Designing performance with the desired learning
assessment tools outcomes (DLO) and the
teaching and learning activities
(TLAS).
Prerequisite of this Lesson
To be able to perform successfully the above culminating
performance tasks, you should have distinguished between
traditional and performance assessments, understood the
processes in setting learning objectives and student
outcomes and in preparing the table of specifications,
identified the different types of performance assessment
tasks, and learned the guidelines in designing performance
assessment tools.
Performance Assessment
1. Clearer Expectations
It is very useful for the students and the teacher if the
criteria are identified and communicated prior to completion of
the task. Students what is expected of them and teachers
know what to look for in student performance. Similarly,
students better understand what good (or bad) performance
on a task looks like if levels of performance are identified,
particularly if descriptors for each level are included.
2. More consistent and objective assessment
In addition to better communicating teacher expectations,
levels of performance permit the teacher to more consistently
and objectively distinguish between good and bad
performance, or between superior, mediocre and poor
performance, when evaluating student work.
3. Better feedback
Furthermore, identifying specific levels of student
performance allows the teacher to provide more detailed
feedback to students. The teacher and the students can more
clearly recognize areas that need improvement.
Analytic Versus Holistic Rubrics
Holistic Rubric
In contrast, a holistic rubric does not list separate levels of
performance for each criterion. Instead, a holistic rubric assigns a
level of performance by assessing performance cross multiple
criteria as a whole. For example, the analytic research rubric above
can be turned into a holistic rubric:
3 – Excellent Speaker
Included 10-12 changes in hand gesture
No apparent inappropriate facial expressions
Utilized proper voice inflection
Can create proper ambiance for the poem
2 – Good Speaker
Included 5-10 changes in hand gesture
few inappropriate facial expressions
Had some inappropriate voice inflection changes
Almost creating proper ambiance
1 – Poor Speaker
Included 1-4 changes in hand gesture
Lots of inappropriate facial expressions
Used monotone voice
Did not create proper ambiance
When to choose analytic rubric
So, when may you use a holistic rubric? Holistic rubric tends
to be used when a quick or gross judgment needs to be made. If
the assessment is a minor one, such as brief homework
assignment, it may be sufficient to apply holistic judgment (e-g,
check, check-plus, or no-check) to quickly review student work.
But holistic rubrics can also be employed for more substantial
assignments. On score tasks it is not easy to evaluate
performance on one criterion independently of performance on a
different criterion. For example, many writing rubrics are holistic
because it is not always easy to disentangle clarity from
presentation. Alternatively, if two criteria are nearly inseparable,
the combination of the two can be treated as a single criterion in
an analytic rubrics.
How Many Levels of Performance Should I Include in my
Rubric?
Although these three levels may not capture all the variations in
student performance on the criterion, it may be sufficient
discrimination for your purposes. Or at the least, it is a place to
start. Upon applying the three levels of performance, you might
discover that you can effectively group your students’ performance
in these three categories. Furthermore, you might discover that the
labels “never”, “sometimes” and “always” sufficiently communicate
to your students the degree to which they can improve on making
eye contact.
On the other hand, after applying the rubric you might
discover that you cannot effectively discriminate among
student performances with just three levels of performance.
Perhaps, in your view, many students fall in between never
and sometimes, or between sometimes and always, and
neither label accurately capture their performance. So, at this
point, you may decide to expand the number of levels of
performance to include never, rarely, sometimes, usually, and
always.
makes eye
Never Rarely Sometimes Usually Always
contact
There is no “right” answer as to how many levels of
performance there should be for a criterion in an analytic
rubric; that will depend on the nature of the task assigned, the
criteria being evaluated, the students involve and your
purposes and preferences. For example, another teacher
might decide to leave off the “always” level in the above
rubrics because “usually” is as much as normally can be
expected or even wanted in some instances. Thus, the “make
eye contact” portion of the rubric for that teacher might be:
makes eye
Never Rarely Sometimes Usually
contact
We recommend that fewer levels of performance be
included initially because such is: