Ability to Benefit (ATB) Assessment vs Pre-Course Questionnaire
Ability to Benefit (ATB) Assessment
An Ability to Benefit Assessment is more formal and often tied to eligibility or enrollment decisions. Its purpose is to determine whether a student has the minimum skills, reasoning ability, and readiness necessary to successfully benefit from the course.
It answers questions like:
- Can this student realistically succeed in this course right now?
- Do they possess enough foundational literacy/digital readiness?
- Would another course be a better starting point?
For the CyberStart, an ATB assessment might determine whether a student can:
- Follow written instructions
- Understand basic digital concepts
- Complete simple computer tasks independently
- Demonstrate enough readiness to benefit from instruction
Pre-Course Questionnaire
A Pre-Course Questionnaire is primarily a placement and preparation tool. Its purpose is to understand what students already know before instruction begins so the course can be adjusted to meet their needs.
It answers questions like:
- What is the student’s current knowledge level?
- What skills do they already have?
- Where are their gaps?
- Do they need extra support?
For the CyberStart course, a pre-course questionnaire might identify whether a student already knows how to:
- Use a mouse and keyboard
- Create files and folders
- Navigate Windows
- Open Microsoft Word
- Use email
Main Goal
To determine course suitability.
How Results Are Used
Approve enrollment
Recommend prerequisite training
Document readiness for funding/compliance
Protect students from being placed in a course beyond their current ability
Tone
Evaluative and gatekeeping (though ideally supportive)
It says:
“Is this the right course for you right now?”
Main Goal
To help the instructor teach more effectively.
How Results Are Used
Adjust pacing
Group students appropriately
Identify topics needing extra review
Personalize support
Tone
Diagnostic and instructional
It says:
“Let’s see where you are so we can help you learn.”
Simple Comparison | ||
Feature | Ability to Benefit Assessment | Pre-Course Questionnaire |
Purpose | Determine readiness/suitability | Measure current knowledge |
Used For | Enrollment decision-making | Instructional planning |
Formality | More formal | Informal to moderate |
Outcome | Place, defer, or redirect the student | Adjust teaching |
Focus | Minimum readiness threshold | Skill gaps |
Question Style | Evaluative | Diagnostic |
For the CyberStart: We’ll probably want both, but use them differently:
Use an Ability to Benefit Assessment first
This answers:
- Should this student start CyberStart?
Example outcome:
Ready for CyberStart
Needs Cyber Basics Orientation first
Use a Pre-Course Questionnaire after acceptance
This answers:
- How should we teach this student?
Example outcome:
Strong file management skills
Needs extra support with Excel
Already comfortable with email
Practical recommendation
For the training program:
Step 1: Ability to Benefit Assessment
(Enrollment screening)
For the training program:
Step 2: Pre-Course Questionnaire
(Instructional customization)