traditional manner) and was able to apply that knowledge in a real context (which could bedemonstrated through an authentic assessment).
D
efining Attributes
o
f Traditi
o
nal and Authentic Assessment
Another way that AA is commonly distinguished from TA is in terms of its defining attributes. Of course, TA's as well as AA's vary considerably in the forms they take. But, typically, along thecontinuums of attributes listed below, TA's fall more towards the left end of each continuum and AA'sfall more towards the right end.
Traditi
o
nal --------------------------------------------- Authentic
Selecting a Response ------------------------------------ Performing a TaskContrived --------------------------------------------------------------- Real-lifeRecall/Recognition ------------------------------- Construction/ApplicationTeacher-structured ------------------------------------- Student-structuredIndirect Evidence -------------------------------------------- Direct EvidenceLet me clarify the attributes by elaborating on each in the context of traditional and authenticassessments:
Selecting a Resp
o
nse t
o
Perf
o
rming a Tas
k:
On traditional assessments, students are typicallygiven several choices (e.g., a,b,c or d; true or false; which of these match with those) and asked toselect the right answer. In contrast, authentic assessments ask students to demonstrateunderstanding by performing a more complex task usually representative of more meaningfulapplication.
Co
ntrived t
o
Real-life
:
It is not very often in life outside of school that we are asked to select fromfour alternatives to indicate our proficiency at something. Tests offer these contrived means of assessment to increase the number of times you can be asked to demonstrate proficiency in a shortperiod of time. More commonly in life, as in authentic assessments, we are asked to demonstrateproficiency by doing something.
Recall
/
Rec
o
gniti
o
n
o
f Kn
ow
ledge t
o
Co
nstructi
o
n
/
Applicati
o
n
o
f Kn
ow
ledge
:
Well-designedtraditional assessments (i.e., tests and quizzes) can effectively determine whether or not studentshave acquired a body of knowledge. Thus, as mentioned above, tests can serve as a nice complementto authentic assessments in a teacher's assessment portfolio. Furthermore, we
are
often asked torecall or recognize facts and ideas and propositions in life, so tests are somewhat authentic in thatsense. However, the demonstration of recall and recognition on tests is typically much less revealingabout what we really know and can do than when we are asked to construct a product or performanceout of facts, ideas and propositions. Authentic assessments often ask students to analyze, synthesizeand apply what they have learned in a substantial manner, and students create new meaning in theprocess as well.
Teacher-structured t
o
Student-structured
:
When completing a traditional assessment, what astudent can and will demonstrate has been carefully structured by the person(s) who developed thetest. A student's attention will understandably be focused on and limited to what is on the test. In