Authentic Assessment

AssessmentDescriptionAdvantages
Oral InterviewsTeachers asks students questions about personal background, activities, readings, and interestsInformal and relaxed context, conducted over successive days with each student, record observations on an interview guide
Story or Test RetellingStudent retell main ideas or selected=Student produces oral report, can be scored on content or language components, Scored with rubric or rating scale, can determine reeading comprehension, reading strategies, and langauge development
Writing SamplesStudents generate narrative, expository, persuasive, or reference paperStudent produces written document, can be scored on content or langauge components, scored with rubric or rating scale, can determine writing processes
Projects/ExhibitionsStudents complete project in content area, working individually or in pairsStudents make formal presentation, written report or both, can observe oral and written products and thinking skills, scored with rubric or rating scale
Experiments/DemonstrationsStudents complete experiment or demonstrate use of materialsStudents make formal presentation, written report or both, can observe oral and written products and thinking skills, scored with rubric or rating scale
Constructed-Response ItemsStudents respond in writing to open-ended questionsStudent produces a written report, usually scored on subtantive information and thinking skills, scored with rubric or rating scale
Teacher ObservationsTeacher observes student attention, response to instructional materials, or interactions with other studentsSetting in classroom environment, takes a little time, record observations with anecdotal notes or rating scales
PortfoliosFocused collection of student work to show progress over timeIntegrates information from a number of sources, gives overall picture of student performance and learning, strong student involvement and commitment, calls for student self-assessment