If you’ve been teaching with proficiency in mind, you’ve probably asked yourself an important question: How do I assess communication in a way that reflects what students can actually do with the language?
Traditional quizzes and tests often measure vocabulary memorization or grammar knowledge in isolation. While those skills have their place, they don’t always show whether students can use the language to interpret messages, interact with others, and share ideas. That’s where Integrated Performance Assessments (IPAs) come in.
What Is an Integrated Performance Assessment?
An Integrated Performance Assessment is a proficiency-focused assessment that evaluates students through the three modes of communication:
- Interpretive Communication
- Interpersonal Communication
- Presentational Communication
Rather than treating these modes as separate and unrelated tasks, an IPA connects them through a common theme or context. Students begin by interpreting authentic language, then use information from that experience to interact with others, and finally create a presentational product. The assessment mirrors how communication happens in the real world. We listen, read, discuss, and share information in connected ways.
The Three Parts of an IPA
1. Interpretive Communication
Students engage with an authentic resource such as a text, video, audio recording, infographic, advertisement, or social media post. Their task is not to translate every word. Instead, they demonstrate comprehension by identifying key ideas, supporting details, and cultural perspectives. The interpretive task provides the foundation for everything that follows.
2. Interpersonal Communication
After working with the authentic resource, students engage in communication with another person. This may take the form of a conversation, discussion, interview, problem-solving task, or collaborative decision-making activity. Students use information gathered during the interpretive phase to exchange ideas and negotiate meaning.
3. Presentational Communication
Finally, students create a product that communicates information, opinions, or recommendations to an audience. Depending on the level and context, this could be spoken, written, or multimedia in nature. The presentational task builds directly from the previous two stages, allowing students to synthesize what they have learned and communicated.
Why IPAs Matter
One of the biggest strengths of an IPA is that it measures language use rather than isolated language knowledge. Instead of asking students whether they know a grammar rule, an IPA asks them to use language to accomplish a purpose. When students complete an IPA, they demonstrate what they can actually do with the language.
Well-designed IPAs:
- Align with proficiency goals
- Reflect real-world communication
- Encourage meaningful language use
- Connect learning and assessment
- Provide a clearer picture of student performance
Common Misconceptions About IPAs
Many teachers assume that IPAs must be large, complicated projects that take weeks to complete. In reality, IPAs can be scaled to fit different levels, schedules, and instructional goals.
Another misconception is that every IPA requires extensive preparation or lengthy authentic resources. Effective IPAs focus on purposeful communication, not complexity. The key is designing tasks that naturally connect the three modes of communication while remaining appropriate for your students’ proficiency levels.
Getting Started
If you’re new to IPAs, begin by identifying a theme or essential question that fits your current unit. Then consider how students might:
- Interpret information from an authentic source.
- Discuss or exchange ideas about that information.
- Present their own message to an audience.
Keeping the assessment connected across all three modes is what makes it an integrated performance assessment. Remember that assessment should reflect communication. IPAs help us move beyond testing what students know about the language and toward measuring what they can do with it.
Ready to Learn More?
Designing effective IPAs becomes much easier when you have a clear planning process, examples, templates, and proficiency-aligned task models.
In my Integrated Performance Assessments (IPA) Quick Win Course, I walk through the entire process of creating meaningful, proficiency-focused assessments that align with the three modes of communication. You’ll learn how to design connected tasks, create effective rubrics, and adapt IPAs for different proficiency levels.







