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Science fair projects are examples. Performance Assessmen

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Science fair projects are examples. Performance Assessment Techniques. Group Projects ... Primarily used for assessing learning in science. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Science fair projects are examples. Performance Assessmen


1
Performance and Portfolio Assessment
2
Performance Assessment
  • An assessment in which the teacher observes and
    makes a judgement about a students demonstration
    of a skill or competency in creating a product.
  • Similar terms include
  • authentic assessment.
  • alternative assessment.
  • portfolio assessment

3
Performance Assessment Techniques
  • Individual Projects.
  • Group Projects.
  • Interviews and Oral Presentations.
  • Constructed Response Questions.
  • Essays.
  • Experiments.
  • Demonstrations.

4
Performance Assessment Techniques Individual
Projects
  • Comprehensive demonstrations of skills or
    knowledge.
  • Usually require student initiative and
    creativity.
  • Trained judges (often teachers) score projects
    against predetermined standards of quality.
  • Science fair projects are examples.

5
Performance Assessment Techniques Group Projects
  • Similar to individual projects.
  • A number of students work cooperatively on a
    complex problem.
  • Trained judges (often teachers) score projects
    against predetermined standards of quality.

6
Performance Assessment Techniques
Interviews/Oral Presentations
  • Allow verbalization of knowledge.
  • Interviews are particularly effective with
    younger children.
  • Examples of usage include foreign language
    assessment, and
  • Solutions to math or science problems.

7
Performance Assessment Techniques Experiments
  • Primarily used for assessing learning in science.
  • Several national organizations (e.g., AAAS, NSTA,
    NSF) advocate the use of experiments in classroom
    assessment of science concepts.
  • Again, trained judges (often teachers) score
    projects against predetermined standards of
    quality

8
Performance Assessment Techniques Demonstrations
  • Give students the opportunity to show their
    mastery of subject-area content and procedures.
  • In physics, for example, use pulleys, gears, and
    inclined planes to move objects.

9
Performance Assessment Techniques Portfolios
  • Collections of student work provide a portrait of
    individual performance over time.
  • Typically, students are asked to evaluate the
    work they select for inclusion.

10
Performance AssessmentAdvantages and Limitations
  • Advantages
  • Assessment of complex, higher-order learning
    targets.
  • Students actively engaged in learning while being
    assessed.
  • Forces teachers to use multiple criteria.
  • Limitations
  • Weaker reliability.
  • Limited sampling of learning targets.
  • Time-consuming.
  • Not good for assessing knowledge learning targets.

11
Performance AssessmentMost Serious Limitation
  • Limited Generalizability
  • Students respond to fewer tasks.
  • Makes it difficult to draw inferences about
    general abilities.
  • If the performance is successful can we infer
    that the student would do well on other tasks?
  • If performance is unsuccessful can we infer that
    the student would do poorly on other tasks?

12
Performance AssessmentsThree essential
components
  • Popham contends, and most experts agree, that a
    performance assessment should contain the
    following three components
  • Multiple criteria.
  • Pre-specified quality standards.
  • Judgmental appraisal.
  • In addition, performance assessments can be
    either simulated or authentic.

13
Performance AssessmentComponents (Popham)
  • Identify the purpose for the assessment.
  • Identify the learning target.
  • Identify activities that illustrate acquisition
    of the targeted capability.
  • Identify the types of evidence needed to infer
    skill acquisition.
  • Identify the standards to be used.
  • Place all this in the rubric.

14
Performance AssessmentEvaluating the Rubric
  • Does it identify critical components of the
    learning target?
  • Does it identify observable behaviors or
    outcomes?
  • Is it appropriate for the students being
    assessed?
  • Does it apply across contexts that call for
    similar behaviors?
  • Does it specify levels of accomplishment?

15
Vehicles for RecordingEvidence of Skill
Acquisition
  • Rating Scales
  • Assess the degree or adequacy of attainment of
    the learning target.
  • Checklists
  • Assess presence or absence of skill acquisition.
  • Anecdotal Records
  • Assess atypical or unusual behaviors on selected
    children for future reference.

16
PortfoliosAdvantages and Limitations
  • Advantages
  • Authenticity.
  • Show growth.
  • Empower students.
  • Foster communication.
  • Great instruc-tional tool.
  • Limitations
  • Many uses of classroom assessment are not served
    well with portfolios.
  • Time consuming.
  • Psychometric problems
  • with validity.
  • with reliability.

17
Portfolio Assessment
  • Assessment or instruction aid?
  • Types of portfolios
  • Purposeful portfolios.
  • Document progress.
  • Showcase accomplishments.
  • Evaluate student status.
  • Work-sample portfolios ( Document typical
    performance).
  • Appraising portfolios (Scored w/ a rubric).

18
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