Common Principles for Uncommon Schools

Horace Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3

Performance and Exhibitions: The Demonstration of Mastery: Examines performance-based assessment-what it looks like, what it measures, how it is graded, how standards can be applied; includes examples and ways to implement and evaluate them. Download PDF

A Final Performance Across the Disciplines

So you want to understand Latin America’s problems: poverty and illiteracy, overcrowding, earthquakes, and political instability (that’s right, war). Can Latin America overcome these problems? Is the United States helping Latin America all it can? What is behind these problems? One key topic we need to understand is the land itself. We will become three teams of experts exploring three

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1991 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics

A Final Performance Across the Disciplines

Discuss behavior patterns as reflected in the insect world, in animals, in hurnan beings, and in literature. Be sure to include references to your course work over the term in Inquiry and Expression, Literature and the Arts, Social Studies, and Science. This may include Macbeth, the drug prevention and communication workshop, Stephen Crane’s poetry, “A Modest Proposal” and other essays

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1990 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics

A Final Performance in History and English

Your final exhibition to demonstrate mastery of the material of these two courses for the first semester will be divided into two parts. The first part is a research paper. The second part is the final examination. Together these constitute 25% of your grade for English and 20% of your grade for World History. 1. For the research assignment, write

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1990 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics

Performance and Exhibitions: The Demonstration of Mastery

What do we want high school students to learn? The most revealing answer can be had by looking at what we expect from them when their time is up. What students know and what they can do, after a course is completed or a high school career ended, is in many ways a reflection of what their schools have expected

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1990 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics

Qualities of “Authentic Performances”

Structure and Logistics Are more appropriately public; involve an audience or panel. Do not rely on unrealistic and arbitrary time constraints. Offer known, not secret, questions or tasks. Are more like portfolios or a season of games, not one- shot. Require some collaboration with others. Recur-and are worth practicing for and retaking. Make assessment and feedback to students so central

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1990 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics

The APU Assessment of Mathematics (Great Britain)

The following section comes from the assessor’s manual in an oral mathematics test of 15-year-olds, involving the ideas of perimeter, area, and circumference: 1. Ask: “What is the perimeter of a rectangle?” [Write student answer.] 2. Present sheet with rectangle ABCD. Ask: “Could you show me the perimeter of this rectangle?” (If necessary, teach.) 3. Ask, “How would you measure

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1990 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics

Walden III’s Rite of Passage Experience (ROPE)

All seniors must demonstrate mastery in fifteen areas of knowledge and competence by completing a portfolio, a project, and six other presentations before a ROPE committee consisting of staff members (including the student’s home room teacher), a student from the grade below, and an adult from the community. Nine of the presentations are based on the materials in the portfolio

Horace: Volume 6 | 1990 | Issue 3 Published: October 12, 1990 By: Kathleen Cushman Topics: Assessment, Exhibitions, Using Rubrics
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