Outcomes-Based Education: Joem Cerio Periña
Outcomes-Based Education: Joem Cerio Periña
Outcomes-Based Education: Joem Cerio Periña
OUTCOMES-BASED
EDUCATION
BY:
JOEM CERIO PERIA
Instructor
Session Objectives:
Explain the meaning of outcomes in OBE
State the relationship among institutional
outcomes, program outcomes, course outcomes,
and learning outcomes
Draw the implications of OBE principles in the
teaching-learning process
Determine whether or not given practices are in
accordance with OBE principles
Legal Bases
CHED Memo 46.S.2012 mandates OBE standards for
higher education institutions.
The Enhanced BEC, more popularly known as the K to
12 Curriculum of the DepEd, introduced content
standards, performance standards, and competencies in
the K to 12 Curriculum Guide (CG).
The Technical Education Skills Development Authority
(TESDA) use Competency Standards in its Training
Regulations long before CHED talked about OBE and
before DepEd introduced its K to 12 standards and
competencies.
What is OBE?
It is an education that is anchored and focused on
outcomes. It is a student-centered approach that
focuses on the intended learning outcomes resulting
from instruction. (Nicholson, 2011)
It is an approach in planning, delivering, and
assessing instruction. It is concerned with planning
instruction that is focused on outcomes, choosing
the methodology that leads to the intended
outcomes and an assessment process that
determines the attainment of intended outcomes.
Determining
assessment
measures for
the
achievement
of outcomes
Deciding on
strategies
and
methodologi
es to achieve
those
outcomes
Meaning of Outcomes
end target of OBE
clear learning results that learners have to
demonstrate, what learners can actually do with
what they know and have learned
actions, products, performances that embody
and reflect the learners competence in using
content, information, ideas, and tools
successfully
culminating demonstration of learning, not
curriculum content.
LEARNING AREA
STANDARD:
The learner demonstrates understanding
and appreciation of key concepts and
principles of mathematics as applied, using
appropriate technology, in problem
solving, critical thinking, communicating,
reasoning, making connections,
representations, and decisions in real life.
Grade 3
GRADE LEVEL
STANDARD:
Grade 4
GRADE LEVEL
STANDARD:
Grade 5
GRADE LEVEL
STANDARD:
Walk-through on Grade
4 Curriculum Guide
Guide questions:
1. What are content standards? Performance standards?
How are they stated?
2. How do these grade 4 standards relate with Grades 3 and
5 standards?
3. How many strands comprise the contents of the
mathematics curriculum for Grade 4? What are they? What
specific topics are covered in each of the strands? Can you
name them?
4. What are learning competencies? How are learning
competencies stated?
5. Why are the learning competencies coded?
Guide question:
6. How will you relate the grade 4 learning competencies
with Grades 3 and 5 competencies? Cite examples for
such relationships. Use the table for your output.
Content
Strand
Learning Competencies
Grade 3
Grade 4
Grade 5
Content Standards
Performance
Standards
Learning
Competencies
Refer to the
knowledge,
understanding,
skills and attitudes
that learners need
to demonstrate in
every lesson and/or
learning activity
CURRICULUM GUIDE
Content
Numbers
and
Number
Sense
Content
Standards
Performance
Standards
Learning
Competencies
Describe the
abilities and
skills that
learners are
expected to
demonstrate in
relation to the
content
standards and
integration of
the 21st
century skills
Refer to the
knowledge,
understanding,
skills and
attitudes that
learners need
to
demonstrate
in every lesson
and/or
learning
activity
Demonstrates
understanding
of whole
numbers up to
100,000
Is able to
recognize and
represent
whole numbers
up to 100,000
in various
forms and
Visualizes numbers
up to 100,000 with
emphasis on
number 10,001
100,000
Gives the place
value and value of
a digit in numbers
up to 100, 000
Code
M4NS-Ia1.4
M4NS-Ia10,4
CONTENT
STANDARD
PERFORMANCE
STANDARD
Do, perform
and
demonstrate
(including
21st
Century
Skills)
LEARNING
COMPETENCIES
Specific
statements of
knowledge,
process/skills
and attitude
that students
are expected
to
demonstrate
to attain the
content
standard
OUTCOMES IN DIFFERENT
LEVELS
Institutional Intended Learning Outcomes (IILOs)
Program Intended Learning Outcomes (PILOs)
Course Intended Learning Outcomes (CILOs)
Institution VisionMission
Statement, Goals
and Philosophy
Learning
Outcomes
Course
Outcomes
Institutional
Outcomes
Attributes of
Ideal Graduate
Program
Outcomes
NCBTS
UNESCO ICT
Competenci
es for
Teachers
CMO 30, s.
2004_PSGs
21st Century
Skills
PROGRA
M
OUTCOM
ES
Philippine
Qualificatio
n
Framework
ASEAN
Qualificatio
ns
Reference
Framework
Institutional
Outcomes
HEI Type
TRADITIONAL/TRANSITIONAL and
TRANSFORMATIONAL OBE
Traditional/Transitional OBE emphasizes student
mastery of traditional subject-related academic
outcomes (usually with a strong focus on subjectspecific content) and some cross-discipline outcomes
(such as ability to solve problems or to work
cooperatively)
Transformational OBE emphasizes long-term, crosscurricular outcomes that are related directly to
students future life roles (such as being productive
worker or a responsible citizen or a person).
ACTIVITY
b) Example 2
a) Learning Outcome: Design an experiment to determine the effect of light
on leaf coloration
b) Strategy/Method: Experimentation, Practical Work Approach
c) Assessment Task: Written Quiz
a)
b)
THANK YOU!!!