ASSESSING STUDENT
LEARNING OUTCOMES
PREPARED BY: MS. ELLAH MARIE V. BALLO, LPT., MAED.
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
1. Clarify the principles in assessing learning
outcomes.
2. Explain the phases of outcomes assessment.
3. Determine alignment of learning outcomes and
assessment tasks.
4. Discuss various assessment methods, tools and
tasks including portfolios.
5. Construct a scoring rubric.
6. Give sample assessment task for each MI.
7. Explain at least 3 key features of assessment in
the K to 12 Program.
I. PRINCIPLES OF GOOD
PRACTICE IN ASSESSING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
I. PRINCIPLES OF GOOD
PRACTICE IN ASSESSING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
I. PRINCIPLES OF GOOD
PRACTICE IN ASSESSING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
I. PRINCIPLES OF GOOD
PRACTICE IN ASSESSING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
1. On which is assessment on the institutional cycle
II. PHASES OF OUTCOME
based after the vision mission of an institution,
ASSESSMENT IN THE
program goals and subject objectives?
2. What is the purpose of diagnostic assessment?
INSTRUCTIONAL CYCLE 3. Based on the institutional cycle, how can you ensure
study phases of outcome assessment in
mastery learning?
the instructional cycle as shown in the
4. How does formative assessment of outcomes differ
figure on the next slide then as a group
from the summative assessment of outcomes?
answer the following questions:
5. Why does summative assessment of outcomes point
to program goals and subject objectives?
III. CONSTRUCTIVE ALIGNMENT
The diagram below illustrates the principle of constructive alignment in the assessment process.
LEARNING
OUTCOME
TEACHING-
ASSESSMENT
LEARNING
TASK
ACTIVITIES
The principle of constructive alignment simply means that the teaching-learning activity/ies and
01
assessment tasks are aligh=ned with the intended learning outcome. The intended learning outcome is "to
drive a car." The teaching-learning activity is driving a car not giving lectures on car driving. The assessment
task is to let the student drive a car not to describe how to drive a car.
02 Make sure your assessment tasks are aligned with your learning outcomes.
03
Constructive alignment is based on the constructivist theory (Biggs, 2007) that learners use their own
activity to construct their knowledge or other outcome/s
SHORT
ACTIVITY
IV. VARIETY OF ASSESSMENT
METHODS, TOOLS AND TASKS
TRADITIONAL ASSESSMENT
-refers to the usual paper-and-pencil
PAPER-AND-PENCIL TEST (Traditional Assessment)
-assessess learning in the cognitive domain (Bloom)
or declarative knowledge (Kendall and Marzano,
2012)
-is inadequate to measure all forms of learning.
-product outputs like reports, papers, research
projects, reviews
-alternate response like True or False,
-performance tests like executing steps of tango,
Yes or No, 4 or 6) delivering a keynote speech, opening a computer,
-completion type like Fill-in-the-blanks demonstration teaching, etc.
V. PORTFOLIO
falls under non-paper-and-pencil test
It is a purposeful collection of student
work or documented performance (e.g.
video of dance) that tells the story of
student achievement or growth.
-Portfolio is not a collection of all student's
work. It is not just a receptacle for all
student's work.
The student's work that is collected
depends on the type and purpose of a
portfolio you want to have. It can be a
collection of products of recorded
performances or photos of performances.
V.A. TYPES OF PORTFOLIO
1. WORKING OR
1. WORKING OR DEVELOPMENT
DEVELOPMEN
T PORTFOLIO PORTFOLIO
-It is a project in the works, containing work in
progress as well as finished samples of work.
2. DISPLAY,
SHOWCASE OR
BEST WORKS
-it demonstrates an individual's development and
PORTFOLIOS
growth over time. Development can be focused on
academic or thinking skills, content knowledge,
self-knowledge, or any area that is important for
3. ASSESSMENT
your purposes (reason why it's also called
OR EVALUATION
PORTFOLIO
development portfolio).
-it can serve as a holding tank for work that may be
selected later for a more permanent assessment
or display portfolio.
V.A. TYPES OF PORTFOLIO
1. WORKING OR
DEVELOPMEN
T PORTFOLIO 2. DISPLAY, SHOWCASE OR BEST WORKS
PORTFOLIOS
2. DISPLAY,
SHOWCASE OR
-It is the display of the students' best work.
BEST WORKS
PORTFOLIOS
-Students exhibit their best work and interpret its
meaning.
3. ASSESSMENT
--Showcase portfolio demonstrates the highest
OR EVALUATION
PORTFOLIO level of achievement attained by the student.
V.A. TYPES OF PORTFOLIO
1. WORKING OR
3. ASSESSMENT OR EVALUATION
DEVELOPMEN
T PORTFOLIO
PORTFOLIO
-The main function of an assessment portfolio is to
document what a student has learned based on
standards and competencies expected of students
2. DISPLAY,
at each grade level.
SHOWCASE OR
BEST WORKS
PORTFOLIOS
-The standards and competencies of the
curriculum will determine what students select for
their portfolios. Their reflective comments will
3. ASSESSMENT
focus on the extent to which they believe the
OR EVALUATION
PORTFOLIO
portfolio entries demonstrate their mastery of the
standards and competencies.
Example: standard/competency specifies persuasive,
narrative, and descriptive writing: as assessment portfolio
should incllude examples of each type of writing.
VI. SCORING RUBRICS
RUBRIC
-It is a coherent set of criteria for students' work that includes
descriptions of levels of performance quality on the criteria.
-The main purpose of rubrics is to assess performance made evident
in processes and products. It can serve as a scoring guide that seeks
to evaluate a student's performance in many different tasks based on
a full range of criteria rather than a single numerical score.
-The objectives tests can be scored by simply counting the correct
answerrs, but the essay tests, student's products and student's
performances cannot be scored the way objective tests are scored.
Products and performances can be scored reliably only with the use
of scoring rubrics.
RUBRICS
According to BROOKHART (2013), Rubrics have two major parts
1. COHERENT SETS OF CRITERIA
2. DESCRIPTIONS OF LEVELS OF PERFORMANCE
FOR THESE CRITERIA
HOW TO CREATE AND USE RUBRICS:
ANALYTIC RUBRICS HOLISTIC RUBRICS
each criterion (dimension,
all criteria (dimensions, traits)
trait) is evaluated separately are evaluated simultaneously.
it is good for formative
scoring is faster than with
assessment analytic rubric
it is adaptable to summative
it is good for summative
assessment because if you
assessment
need an overall score for
grading, you can combine
the scores.
THANK YOU