Performance Based Assessment

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PERFORMANCE- BASED ASSESSMENT Agung Is Hardiyana F Novian Zaini

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Performance Based Assessment

Transcript of Performance Based Assessment

Page 1: Performance Based Assessment

PERFORMANCE-BASEDASSESSMENTAgung Is Hardiyana F

Novian Zaini

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BACKGROUND

Primarily caused by dissatisfaction to the traditional tests, which are lack of:

ValidityAuthenticity

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“The core problem is that our education and training systems were built for another era, an era in which most workers needed only rudimentary education … [The world of the future is] a world in which routine work is largely done by machines … in which line workers who cannot contribute to the design of the products they are fabricating may be as obsolete as the last model of that product.”

New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce (in Stanford SRN informational booklet, 2008)

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DEFINITIONS Performance should be able to be observed.

Tuckman (1975:171) states that it is used to label the observable manifestations of knowledge, understanding, ideas, concepts, skills and so on (that is, the cognitive and psychomotor domains).

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DEFINITIONS The term “performance-based assessment” is frequently referred to as

performance assessment, or by its acronym, PBA.

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DEFINITIONS McMillan (2007: 229) defines that it is one in which the teacher observes

and makes judgment about the student’s demonstration of a skill or competency in creating a product, constructing a response, or making a presentation.

Kind (in Mauch, 2005: 2) describes Performance based Assessment as one that:

Requires students to use higher level thinking skills,

Places the problem within a real world context,

Assesses the process and reasoning used to solve the problem as well as the solution attained.

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DEFINITIONSperformance-based assessment requires the students’ knowledge to produce a product as the evidence of their mastery.

The performance might be done in real or virtual situation.

Jones defines performance assessment as an applied performance test measures performance on tasks requiring the application of learning in an actual or simulated setting (as cited in Brooks, 1999: 15).

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CHARACTERISTICSStrengths Weaknesses

Authentic

Integrated with instruction

Engaging

No single correct answer

Specific criteria

McMillan (2007:228)

Reliability

Sampling

Time

Based on the 3 modes of communication:

Interpretive, Interpersonal, Presentational

Show developmental progress of proficiency:

1. Novice (novice-high; beginning)

2. Intermediate (Intermediate-low/mid; emerging)

3. Pre-Advance (Intermediate-high; expanding)

Sandrock (2008:1)

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3 MODES OF COMMUNICATION: INTERPRETIVE, INTERPERSONAL, PRESENTATIONAL

SEE THE TABLE

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CHARACTERISTICS Reliability

1. The instability of students’ performance can make the result unreliable.

2. scoring also becomes the other factors that can make unreliable.

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CHARACTERISTICS Time

… First, it is very time-consuming to construct good tasks, develop scoring criteria and rubrics, administer the task, observe the students, and then apply the rubrics to students’ performance. … Second, it is difficult, in a timely fashion, to interact with all students and give them meaningful feedback as they learn and make decisions. Finally, it is difficult to estimate the amount of time students will need to complete performance assessments, especially if the task is a new one and if students are unaccustomed to the format and/ or expectations.

(McMillan, 2007: 232)

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CHARACTERISTICS

Sample

the result of assessment cannot reflect whole ability of the students. To know that, you need to give them multiple tasks which means more time is needed.

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RESTRICTED & EXTENDED PERFORMANCE TASKSRestricted

Restricted/Specific in terms of scope

Extended

Wider in terms of scope

 Restricted Extended

Ex

a

m

pl

es

Describe orally the condition in a

place.

Tell the direction of a specific

place.

Tell what activities can be done

in the place.

Tell about favorite places.

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STEPS IN PREPARING PBA Specifying the performance outcomes

Restricted Extended

Selecting the focus of the assessment Procedure Product

Selecting an appropriate degree of realism

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STEPS IN PREPARING PBA (CONT.) Selecting the performance situation

Paper-and-pencil performance Identification test Structured performance test Simulated performance Work sample Student project

Selecting the method of observing, recording, and scoring Checklists Rating scales Rubrics (Holistic or Analytic )

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CHECKLIST

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RATING SCALE

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Holistic Rubric

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Analytic Rubric