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Assessment

General assessment advice

Advice on matters related to the administration of Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE) assessment is published annually in the VCE  Administrative Handbook. Updates to matters related to the administration of VCE assessment are published in the VCAA Bulletin.

Teachers must refer to these publications for current advice.

The principles underpinning all VCE assessment practices are explained in VCE assessment principles.

The procedures for managing VCE school-based assessment are explained in Assessment advice for the VCE.

The glossary of command terms provides a list of terms commonly used across the Victorian Curriculum F–10, VCE study designs and VCE examinations and to help students better understand the requirements of command terms in the context of their discipline.

VCE Biology Study Design 2022–2026 examination specifications, past examination papers and corresponding examination reports can be accessed from the VCE Biology examination webpage.

Graded Distributions for Graded Assessment can be accessed from the VCAA Senior Secondary Certificate Statistical Information webpage.

Excepting third-party elements, schools may use this resource in accordance with the VCAA’s Educational Allowance (VCAA Copyright and Intellectual Property Policy).

Units 1 and 2

All assessments for Units 1 and 2 are school-based. The determination of an S or N for each of Units 1 and 2 is a separate consideration from the assessment of levels of achievement. Teachers should note the cognitive demand of the command terms in the outcome statements to determine the type of teaching and learning activities and evidence of student understanding that will be needed for students to demonstrate satisfactory completion of each outcome.

Procedures for assessment of levels of achievement in Units 1 and 2 are a matter for schools to decide. Schools have flexibility in deciding how many and which assessment tools they use for each outcome, provided that these decisions are in accordance with VCE Biology Study Design and VCE Assessment Principles.

The following information provides an overview of scope of tasks that may be selected for Units 1 and 2 and general considerations when developing the assessment tasks involving increased student agency specified for Unit 1 Outcome 3 and Unit 2 Outcome 3.

Units 3 and 4 school-based assessment


VCE Biology School-based Assessment report
This report provides feedback of the results from the School-based Assessment Audit in the first year of implementation for this study.

Performance descriptors

The VCE Biology Performance descriptors are advisory and designed to support teacher judgments in differentiating between levels of students’ achievement in demonstrating the key knowledge and relevant key science skills for each of the five School-assessed Coursework (SAC) tasks across Unit 3 and 4. The performance descriptors have been developed using the relevant Key Science Skills on pages 7 and 8 of the VCE Biology Study Design for each SAC task.

VCE performance descriptors can assist teachers in:

  • moderating student work,
  • making consistent assessment,
  • helping determine student point of readiness (zone of proximal development), and
  • providing more detailed information for reporting purposes.

Using VCE performance descriptors can assist students by providing them with informed, detailed feedback and by showing them what improvement looks like.

Teachers can also explore the VCE performance descriptors with their students, unpacking the levels of expected performance so students have a clear understanding of what can be possible in terms of development and achievement.

When developing SAC tasks, teachers are advised to adapt the VCAA VCE performance descriptors to relate to the SAC task used and their school context. Teachers should use their professional judgment when deciding how to adapt the rubrics, considering the VCE Assessment Principles, the requirements of the relevant study design, the relevant outcome, key knowledge, key science skills and assessment tasks, and the student cohort.

Teachers may consider using the following guidelines when adapting the VCE Performance descriptors and/or developing an assessment tool:

  • Develop the SAC task and assessment rubric simultaneously.
  • Assess the outcome through a representative sample of key knowledge and key science skills. Not all key knowledge and key science skills will be formally assessed in a SAC task – some key knowledge and key science skills are observable in classroom engagement and learning – but all criteria in any assessment tool must be drawn directly from the study design.
  • Select the components of the VCE Performance descriptors that are most appropriate and most relevant for the selected outcome and SAC task.
  • Attempt to capture the skill level of a range of students within the cohort: the lowest expected quality of performance should be something most or all students can do, and the highest expected quality of performance should be something that extends the most able students. Similarly, ensure that the range of qualities identified in the rubric shows the lower and the upper range of what an individual student could show in terms of the outcome, key knowledge and the key science skills.
  • Where necessary, add specific key knowledge and/or key science skills to provide context to the expected qualities of performance.
  • Where necessary, remove expected qualities of performance that may not be relevant to the selected outcome and developed SAC task.
  • Show a clear gradation across the expected qualities of performance, indicating progression from one quality to the next.
  • Use consistent language from the study design outcome, key knowledge and key science skills.
  • Ensure command terms reflect the cognitive demands of the outcome. Refer to the glossary of command terms for a list of terms commonly used across the Victorian Curriculum F–10, VCE study designs and VCE examinations.

Teachers may also choose other assessment tools, including marking schemes, checklists, rubrics and pairwise comparisons, when developing SAC tasks.