21st CENTURY ASSESSMENT (CHAPTER 1)
TYPES OF ASSESSMENT (CHAPTER 2)
NATURE OF PERFORMANCE BASED ASSESSMENT (CHAPTER 3)
DESIGNING MEANINGFUL P-B-A (CHAPTER 4)
AFFECTIVE LEARNING COMPETENCIES (CHAPTER 5)
100

Assessment in classroom instruction with the primary goal of measuring entry behavior.

Placement Assessment

100

Paper-and-pencil test

Traditional assessment

100

The student’s performance must be judged using

more than one evaluation criterion.

Multiple evaluation criteria.

100

The first step in designing performance based assessment.

Define the purpose.

100

A number of non-cognitive variables such as a person's attitude, interest and values.

Affect

200

Assessment in classroom instruction with the primary goal of measuring end-of-course achievement.

Summative assessment

200

Activity emulates real life.

Performance Assessment.

200

This task requires students to make decision or clarify a position.

DETERMING A POSITION

200

Describe clearly the physical action required for a given task.

Psychomotor skills.

200

Peer relations

Social Relationship Targets.

300

A type of educational decision in which an examinee is accepted or rejected for admission or qualification to a program or school activity based on the results of the assessment.

Selection

300

Gives us information on what the student can perform by comparing to another student.

Norm-referenced assessment.

300

This task shows how the students use knowledge

and skills to complete well-defined complex tasks.

DEMONSTRATION TASK

300

It requires the teacher to list and identify the major knowledge and skills which are critical in the development of process or product tasks.

Analytic rubric

300

x2 : Team has a choice to double their points. they can bet from 0 to the total they have accumulated. if the answer is correct they double the points if the answer is wrong, they lose the amount they wagered.

Name one component of attitudes.

1. Affective

2. Cognitive

3. Behavioral

400

Name one General 21st century skill.

Oral and written communication

Quantitative reasoning ability together with scientific methodology

Analyzing, synthesizing and developing creative solutions.

Use of technology

Information literacy

400

Pertains to the use of formative evaluation to determine and improve students' learning outcomes.

Assessment for learning

400

Name on weakness of Performance Assessment

1.Reliability may be difficult to establish.


2. Measurement error due to subjective nature of

the scoring may be significant.


3.Inconsistent student performance across time

may result in inaccurate conclusions.


4.Few samples of student achievement.

400

Describes how well or poorly any given task has been performed and determine to what degree the student has met a certain criterion.

Scale

400

This happens when students do something or engage themselves in activities because they find the activities interesting, enjoyable, or challenging.

Intrinsic motivation.

500

Name one characteristic of a good learning outcome.

1.Very specific, and use verbs

2.Focused on the learner

3.Realistic 

4.Focused on the application and integration of acquired knowledge and skills.

5.Prepare students for assessments and help them feel engaged.

6.Offer a timeline of completion.


500

Uses summative evaluation which provides evidence of student's level of achievement in relation to curricular learning outcomes.

Assessment of learning.

500

Finish the sentence:

The highest level of evaluation, according

to ______________, focuses on the

outputs (product) that students are required

to achieve through authentic performance

tasks.

DepEd Order No.7, 2012

500

Occurs when the teacher's general impression of the students affects scores given on individual traits or performance.

Halo effect.

500

In 1964, ______________, together with his colleagues, extended

Bloom's Taxonomy of Education Objectives by publishing the second

taxonomy of objectives, this time giving emphasis on he affective

domain.

David R.Krathwohl