Create a Standards-Based Integrated Performance Assessment Unit
Step-by-Step
Step 9: Determine Key Learning Activities/Formative Assessments
Step 7 is final step in designing a standards-based integrated performance assessment unit. With a clear “destination” (the instructional goals and performance assessments) in place, you can now plan the “route” you will take to arrive at your destination. How will your students learn the structures and vocabulary for the unit? How will they learn the content? It is time to plan your daily lessons, always keeping in mind the final destination.
Finding appropriate resources, especially for the Interpretive Mode, is perhaps the greatest challenge in designing a standards-based integrated performance assessment unit. You need to look for resources throughout the process of designing the unit. You may be able to use your textbook as a resource if it includes authentic texts related to your unit theme. As students become accustomed to the standards-based unit design, they may be able to look for authentic texts on-line if you give them a specific topic and type of text. Remember that a text can be used at multiple levels of instruction. Remember it is not the text but the task that needs to be modified depending on the language level of the students. As you find resources, make a note in the "Resources" box on the template indicating where you stored the resource so that you can find it easily when you teach the unit again. This is also helpful to colleagues when you share the unit. The "Digital Literacy Integration" box on the template is a place to reflect on how technology can be used to enhance the learning in the unit.
Before watching the video
Look at the infographic to the right and create a task for a novice learner of English and one for an intermediate learner of English.

As you watch the video
In this video segment, the teachers discuss how they select activities and monitor their students’ progress throughout the unit via formative assessments. Formative assessment as defined by FAST SCASS, a consortium of the Council of Chief State School officers (CCSSO) is:
a process used by teachers and students during instruction that provides feedback to adjust ongoing teaching and learning to improve students' achievement of intended instructional outcomes.
As quoted in Popham, W. J. (2008). Transformative Assessment. ASCD. Available online.
As you watch the video, note the ideas that the teachers share about selecting activities for their lesson plans and the role of formative assessments.

After watching the video
Refer back to the definition of formative assessments. What are some ways that you check to see if your students understand the content and use the language successfully?