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Product-Oriented Learning Competencies

Product-oriented learning competencies focus on evaluating student performance through final products or outputs. These products can demonstrate a wide range of skills from communication to physical tasks. Rubrics are used to assess student proficiency based on three levels: novice, skilled, and expert. The levels describe the expected features and quality of the final product, from minimum requirements at level 1, to additional features and aesthetics at level 3. Examples provided demonstrate applying these levels to assess geometry shapes, historical scrapbooks, and typing outputs in terms of accuracy, completeness, and presentation.

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Topacio Manlaput
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
4K views7 pages

Product-Oriented Learning Competencies

Product-oriented learning competencies focus on evaluating student performance through final products or outputs. These products can demonstrate a wide range of skills from communication to physical tasks. Rubrics are used to assess student proficiency based on three levels: novice, skilled, and expert. The levels describe the expected features and quality of the final product, from minimum requirements at level 1, to additional features and aesthetics at level 3. Examples provided demonstrate applying these levels to assess geometry shapes, historical scrapbooks, and typing outputs in terms of accuracy, completeness, and presentation.

Uploaded by

Topacio Manlaput
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Product-Oriented Learning Competencies

Products can include a wide range of student works that target specific skills. Examples: Communication skills such as those demonstrated in reading, writing, speaking, and listening, or psychomotor skills requiring physical abilities to perform a given task

Using rubrics can help evaluate student performance or proficiency in any given task as it relates to a final product or learning outcome.

The learning competencies associated with products or outputs are linked with an assessment of the level of expertise manifested by the product. 3 Levels Novice or beginner level Skilled level Expert level

Other ways to state productoriented learning competencies


Level 1: Does the finished product or project
illustrates the minimum expected parts or functions?

Level 2: Does the finished product or project

contain additional parts and functions on top of the minimum requirements?


minimum parts and functions, have additional features on top of the minimum, and is aesthetically pleasing?

Level3: Does the finished product contain the basic

Example
The desired product is a representation of a cubic prism made out of cardboard in an elementary geometry class. Learning competencies: The final product submitted by the students must: 1. 2. 3. Possess the correct dimensions (5x5x5) Be sturdy, made of durable cardboard and properly fastened together Be pleasing to the observer, preferably properly colored for aesthetic purposes

Example
The product desired is a scrapbook illustrating the historical event called EDSA I People Power Learning competencies: The scrapbook presented by the students must:

1.
2.

Contain pictures, newspaper clippings, and other illustrations of the main characters of EDSA I
Contain remarks and captions for the illustrations made by the student himself for the roles played by the characters of EDSA I People Power Be presentable, complete, informative and pleasing to he reader of the scrapbook

3.

Example for assessing output of short-term tasks


The desired output consists of the output in a typing class Learning competencies: The final typing outputs of the students must: 1. Possess no more than five errors in spelling

2.
3.

Possess no more than 5 errors in spelling while observing proper format based on the document to be typewritten
Posses no more than 5 errors in spelling, has the proper format, and is readable and presentable

Product-oriented performance based learning are evidence-based

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