Performance Based
Performance Based
II
The social aspect of learning is reflected in the peer interaction that performance-
based tasks require. Pupils thus develop helpful social skills for life. Such cooperative
work leads to peer guidance and other kinds of social interaction such as negotiating,
reaching a consensus, respecting others’ opinions, individual contribution to the group
effort and shared responsibility for task completion.
As for the metacognitive aspect of learning (pupils’ thinking about their own
learning), skills such as reflection and self-assessment also contribute to the learning
process. When teachers require pupils to think about what they are learning, how they
learn and how well they are progressing, they develop skills which make them more
independent and critical pupils.
12
What is Performance-Based Assessment?
Two examples of such process tools appear in the section on Classroom Assessment
Tools.
13
What is a Performance Task?
The following are some examples of performance tasks, divided into products and
performances:
PRODUCTS PERFORMANCES
plan or diagram
14
The following characteristics should be remembered when designing a performance
task:
See also Principles Underlying the Choice of Tasks in the Curriculum. Examples of
performance tasks are included here in the section on Classroom Assessment Tools.
The process of designing performance tasks can be divided into three simple steps.
Step 1. List the specific skills and knowledge you wish pupils to
demonstrate.
Teachers should identify the goals (i.e., types of knowledge and skills) pupils are
expected to reach in each teaching unit. This step is quite simple, since the
knowledge and skills a pupil needs are the Curriculum’s standards and benchmarks in
the various domains. Once this list is compiled, the teaching goals to be assessed
selected.
Teachers should set tasks that will demonstrate which language knowledge and skills
have been developed. The pupils’ performance on these tasks should illustrate what
they have learned and the degree to which they have achieved the teaching goals.
language level and cognitive ability. Foundation level tasks will be simple and
structured, and as pupils become more proficient and independent, the tasks will
become more complex and less structured. As mentioned above, the tasks should be
related to real-life experiences. See the list of performance task types above.
16
Determine criteria for successful task mastery. The Curriculum (for example, p. 25)
specifies criteria relevant to each domain. The following section on rubrics will further
Rubrics
Introduction
How often have you tried to grade your pupils’ book tasks or other open-ended oral or
written projects, and not known if you have graded them accurately? Could you
justify the grade if necessary? Would another teacher give the same grade as you? In
other words, how reliable is your assessment?
Can you clearly evaluate your set goals using this task? Do these criteria reflect
quality performance on this task? In other words, is your assessment valid?
A rubric is a scoring tool outlining required criteria for a piece of work, or what is
important to assess. It also indicates the weighting that has been determined for each
criterion, based on its relative importance to the overall task, and describes what the
performance would look like at different quality levels. If the pupils receive this before
beginning the task, they can more easily internalize the criteria, understand how they
will be assessed and thus the performance level they should be striving for. Ideally,
teachers develop this together with pupils, though it can be prepared by the teacher
and given to the pupils for comments before they begin the task.
See p. 23 for an example of a checklist. Other samples can be found in the section on
Classroom Assessment Tools.
See p. 22 for a rubric to assess the benchmark of “interacting for purposes of giving
and following directions.” In this, pupils form pairs, giving and following directions
17
using a town map. The selected criteria are listed on the left. Expected levels of
performance for each criterion are outlined.
Rubrics make teachers and pupils accountable and aware of the learning
objectives.
The teacher will be able to justify the grade clearly, with reference to the criteria.
Moreover, involvement of pupils empowers them, leading to more focused and self-
directed learning.
Rubrics are easy to understand and use. They can be referred to in parent-
19
Building a rubric
The following flow chart shows the process of designing a rubric. Samples of rubrics used in tasks are presented in the section on
Classroom Assessment Tools.
20
Instructions Explanations Tips
List the teaching goals, Think in terms of what Use the curriculum
including prerequisites you want the pupils to benchmarks.
(enabling skills) that accomplish. For example: criteria for
the task should an oral presentation
address. These will be require presentation skills
used to judge pupils’ Ensure the chosen (a catchy opening,
product or criteria focus on the awareness of audience,
performance. essential elements for etc.) as well as content,
that task. accuracy and fluency.
Determine the Determine the most Ask your pupils what they
weighting of each of important indicators that think “counts" in assessing
the different criteria. ensure that the goals of the task, and which of
the task have been met. these elements should
When possible, do this receive most points.
stage with your pupils.
Criteria related to content
should come first (most
important), while the
technical ones (e.g.,
spelling) should come
lower down in the table.
Assess the tasks using You will discover the Modify your rubric
the rubric. strengths and accordingly before using it
weaknesses of the rubric next time.
only when you start
using it to judge pupils'
work.
My name is Ora Davidson. I teach weak pupils in a Junior High School in central
Israel. I instructed my pupils to graphically present a story they had read, using
collage, poster, comics and short captions describing events and characters.
Before they began their work, I split the class into groups and asked them, “If you
were me, how would you grade each graphic representation? What would you look
for specifically?” After allowing time for discussion, I asked each group to rank the
qualities they had selected in order of importance, from most important to least
important.
Next, each group presented their top three criteria to the class. I wrote them on
the board and asked the class to determine the most relevant ones. With my
guidance, they agreed on four qualities: inclusion of main events, relevant
descriptions, accurate language and presentation.
Pupils were then asked, “What should be considered ‘poor,’ ‘fair,’ ‘good’ and
‘excellent’ performance for each criterion?” One pupil suggested a poor
presentation would include mostly incorrect captions, or a large number of
language errors, which the other pupils conceded. “What if only some of the facts
are wrong?” I asked. “That would be a fair grade,” said one pupil. “I think having
some of the facts wrong should still be a poor grade,” argued another pupil.
Finally, after further discussion, a consensus was reached among the class that
making only a few factual errors would earn a “fair” grade, and correctly
composing all the captions warranted an “excellent” score on accuracy. Similarly,
outstanding graphics demonstrating effort and time invested would earn an
“excellent” rating on the fourth criterion.
22
Following our negotiations, before the pupils began to work, they were given a
copy of the rubric we had designed. Pupils had the satisfaction of having input into
establishing a rating system they considered clear and fair.
Although it may initially be difficult (and some of our discussions did take place in
Hebrew), I highly recommend involving pupils in the rubric design. It is extremely
rewarding.
23
Implementing Performance-Based Teaching and Assessment
The tool presented below, the Advance Unit Organizer, is an efficient way to plan a
performance-based teaching unit. It comprises not only teaching activities, but also
goals (or benchmarks) and assessment methods at every stage. It helps the teacher
integrate these three interlinked aspects of teaching, as it combines planning,
teaching and assessment into a single integrated process, giving teachers a graphic
representation of the various domains, benchmarks, enabling skills (prerequisites),
classroom activities and assessment tools needed for a complete unit of performance-
based instruction.
24
ty with and follow
maps directions
with town
Asking map.
and
answerin
g simple
question
s
Independe
nt pair-
work
* The enabling skills/prerequisites are the components enabling pupils to reach the
benchmark.
They include, for example, practice of vocabulary and grammar items that are needed
to meet the benchmark criteria.
The example shows this process for a single benchmark, “interacting for purposes of
giving and following directions.” The enabling skills/prerequisites for this benchmark –
“the vocabulary of directions,” “familiarity with maps,” the grammar of “asking and
answering simple questions” and “the ability to work independently in pairs” – are
mapped out on the Advance Organizer. These skills must be taught before pupils
perform the task.
To show the final stage of the process, let us take another, more detailed look at the
rubric for this benchmark.
Rubric for the benchmark ‘Interacting for purposes of giving and following
directions’
5 10 15 20 25
Did not get * Followed part * Got message
Product message across; of route across: found
did not find place place on map
on map
5 10 15 20 25
Fluency Spoke hesitantly, Fairly fluent Spoke fluently
read out answers
25
Accuracy 5 10 15 20 25
(vocabula Incorrect or no Some correct Correct
ry expressions and expressions expressions
and question forms and question and question
question used forms used forms used
form)
5 10 15 20 25
No evidence of Some Took turns,
Process cooperation and cooperation listened to
practice and practice each other and
practiced
* This rubric allocates points at five levels. The in-between columns (10, 20 points) are
to be used when a pupil’s performance falls between two of the descriptions.
This rubric includes the following criteria: product (Did they get the message across?);
fluency (Did they practice their performance? Did they speak without hesitation?);
accuracy (Did they use the correct vocabulary of directions and the correct question
forms?); and process (Was there evidence of cooperation; did they work in pairs
independent of the teacher?).
This tool ensures that assessment is an integral part of the learning-teaching process
and that performance is assessed systematically according to planned criteria
compatible with the teaching goals and made known to pupils beforehand. See below
a pupil’s checklist for this benchmark, to enable self-monitoring of the task.
Pupils’ Checklist
26
Poor Good
Excellent
We grade ourselves: 2 4 6 8 10
P A
The teacher as juggler
27
An end to juggling: integrated planning, teaching and
assessment
Note: blank organizers are included in Appendices A and B for teachers and staff to
use as planning tools. Appendix B helps to distinguish between benchmarks and
enabling skills. Another format that can be used as a performance task/unit planner
appears in the section on Classroom Assessment Tools.
28
Steps in Unit Planning- Guidelines and Tips
Guidelines Tips
29
Guidelines Tips
10. Assess the end product The assessment tool should contain
with the assessment tool the same criteria as those used
designed in the preparation while monitoring pupils’ progress.
stage.
Experience has proven that teachers planning assessments before teaching a unit
achieve improved results, such as focused teaching and more valid and accurate
assessment.
The following teachers’ reactions on using an advance organizer prove this point.
They were documented in reflections by teachers on their final assignment,
submitted for a course on Curriculum Implementation (Northern District, 2000).
"Planning the 10th grade test was a critical incident for us… we realized that we
didn't teach it all. That hit us very hard. We chose our goals but rushed them
through toward the end. It made us really think what we had accomplished with
the pupils…We realized we didn't do enough to practice specific points… We
must plan in advance with the goals fixed in advance. We didn't feel it until we
planned the test."
"Performance-based tasks are exactly what answers our pupils' needs and
makes our work meaningful. This has become our goal in planning units and
lessons."
"Due to having to justify the lesson in terms of domains and benchmarks, I was
forced to be more aware of assessment tools."
30
The place of performance tasks in the overall teaching plan
Working on process
Besides focusing on the product of a pupil’s work, the process of preparing work and
task implementation should be included in the assessment, as explained above.
We have included some tools for assessing process in the section on Classroom
Assessment Tools.
Portfolios
31