Professional Documents
Culture Documents
QUARTER I
Proposed Multimodal Assessment Strategy on Reflective Learning
Using the IDEA Instructional Process
3 Meets Expectations
2 Approaching Expectations
1 Below Expectations
INDICATORS
CRITERIA 4 3 2 1
Reflective
Thinking The reflection The reflection The reflection The reflection
explains the explains the attempts to does not
student’s own student’s thinking demonstrate address the
thinking and about his/her own thinking about student’s
learning learning processes. learning but is thinking and/or
processes, as vague and/or learning.
well as unclear about the
implications for personal learning
future learning. process.
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APPENDIX B.
NOTES ON IDEA LESSON EXEMPLAR BASED ON RO 10 s. 2020
A. In the I Phase, the teacher utilizes appropriate strategies in presenting the learning competency and the
desired learning outcomes of the day, expound on previous experiences and core knowledge of the
learners, purpose of the lesson, core content and relevant samples. This allows teachers to maximize
learners’ awareness of their own knowledge as regards to the content and skills required for the session.
B. In the D Phase, the teacher presents activities, tasks and contents of value and interest to the learners. Most
of these activities and tasks must simply and directly revolve around the concepts to develop and master
the skills or the competency.
C. In the E Phase, the teacher allows the learners to be
engaged in various tasks and opportunities in building their
KSAVs to meaningfully connect their learnings.
This further requires teachers to engage and expose all
learners to real life situations that will ignite their interests to
meet the expectations, make their performance
satisfactory or produce a product or performance.
D. In the A Phase, the teacher brings the learners to a
process where they demonstrate ideas, interpretations,
mindset or values and create pieces of information that
will form part of their knowledge in reflecting, relating or using it effectively in any situation or context. This
also requires teachers to encourage learners in creating conceptual structures giving them the avenue to
integrate new and old learnings.
46. The basic assessment procedures in dealing with the K to 12 LCs, MELCs and enabling and enrichment
competencies should comply with the provisions of DepEd Order No. 8, s. 2015 (Policy Guidelines on Classroom
Assessment for the K to 12 Basic Education Program). Teachers are encouraged to use a wide range of formative,
summative, authentic and performance assessment tools and approaches involving the use of multimodal
assessment strategies to ensure that all learning competencies are well-assessed.
47. In using multimodal assessment, teachers should help learners in understanding the contexts of good
performance by providing them clear desired learning outcomes, criteria, expected outputs and engaging
learners as active participants in the feedback process where teachers act as responsible academic partners.
48. Weeks (2018) mentioned that the use of multimodal assessment is important to:
(a) keep up with a society that is increasingly digital and ensure that
assessment mirrors current and future employment needs;
(b) be in tune with
learners’ expectations and literacy practices; and
(c) offer choice and
flexibility in assessment.
49. As an approach, multimodal assessment offers a significant amount of assessment strategies and techniques to
teachers to carefully assess learners’ performance in various manners relative to the context of the K to 12 LCs and
MELCs. This involves the promotion of reflective learning as one of the key agents of multimodal assessment. Thus,
all teachers are encouraged to facilitate the development of learners’ portfolio per week on any modality chosen
by the learners and/or parents.
50. The use of reflective learning embedded in multimodal assessment should not only direct a feedback process
but also promote personal reflection processes where learners reflect more on their knowledge, skills,
attitude/values, aspirations and actions as contribution in making the society a better place for all. This allows
learners to think about what they have thought, read, seen, done and learned by relating these concrete
concepts to their own lives. Through this, learners can make meaning on the significance and relevance of what
they are doing and learning in the classroom to their everyday lives.
51. As reflective learning emphasizes the importance of the role of the ‘self’ in personal experiences and social
contexts, teachers should engage learners into various reflective learning activities such as, but not limited to,
Schon’s (1983) reflection-in-action (reflecting on personal or social actions as they happen) and reflection-on-
action (reflecting on personal or social action after their occurrence to review, assess or evaluate the situation).
From the long-list of reflective learning practices, teachers may choose any appropriate reflective learning
strategies relevant to the contexts and level of the learners.