What is a Performance Assessment?
Performance Assessments are TESTS that are:
- SHORTER in length (60 questions that are structured just like the Practice questions in the SAP).
- FOCUSED on only 20% of the field each year.
- OPEN BOOK – you may use any resource except another person.
- TIMED
- You'll have two hours to complete a Performance Assessment for Cardiovascular Disease, Interventional Cardiology and Heart Failure.
- You'll have three hours to complete a Performance Assessment for Electrophysiology.
- You must complete the assessment in one sitting.
- ONLINE – you may take a Performance Assessment in your home or office
- Available during two specific weeks each year.
- You have two CHANCES TO PASS EACH YEAR – once during each week of availability. Starting the year that your MOC assessment requirement is due, you will need to pass a Performance Assessment each year.
When Can I Take a Performance Assessment?
Performance Assessments are offered for two one-week windows each year. During each one-week window, you may take the Performance Assessment ONCE at your convenience any time of day or night. You do not need to schedule a specific time. Please avoid waiting until the last two or three hours of the one-week window to take your Performance Assessment so there is time to resolve any unforeseen issues that may occur.
If you want two (2) chances to pass, be sure to participate in the first Performance Assessment; if you miss it or skip it, you will only have one chance to pass with the second Performance Assessment.
Can I Take the Performance Assessment as Many Times as I Want During the Administration Windows?
No, you may take a Performance Assessment once during each administration window.
What Information Will I Receive After Completing a Performance Assessment?
- After completing a Performance Assessment, most participants will receive immediate feedback about whether they passed or did not pass.
- Some participants will score within a range that requires additional analysis and will not learn immediately whether they passed. They will learn their status via the Score Report described below.
- Two weeks after the Performance Assessment window closes, ACC will release detailed score reports with the following information:
- Your scaled score
- The passing scaled score
- Recommended content for further study based on the questions you answered incorrectly. (To maintain question security, you won't be able to see the questions again or see exactly which questions you answered correctly or incorrectly.)
- ACC will email all participants when the score report is available within the CMP Hub.
Where Can I Find My CMP Score Report?
- Login to your SAP and enter the CMP Hub.
- Scroll to the bottom of the CMP Hub and click the link titled Click Here to See Your Score Report for Performance Assessment X.
- Click the button labeled CMP Score Report (it's in the orange Score Box).
Do I Have to PASS the Performance Assessment?
Starting the year that your assessment requirement is due, you must pass a Performance Assessment every year to meet your MOC assessment requirement. You will have two chances to pass each year. Please note that if you want two chances to pass, you must participate in the first Performance Assessment; if you miss it or skip it, then you will only have one attempt to pass with the second Performance Assessment.
How Do I Know if I Pass the CMP?
- After completing a Performance Assessment, most participants will receive IMMEDIATE FEEDBACK about whether they passed or did not pass.
- Some participants will score within a range that requires additional analysis and will not learn immediately whether they passed. They will learn their pass/fail status via the Score Report described below.
- Detailed Score Reports will be released two weeks after the Performance Assessment window closes. Score Reports will include:
- Your score
- The passing score
- Recommended content for further study based on the questions you answered incorrectly. (To maintain question security, you won't be able to see the questions again or see exactly which questions you answered correctly or incorrectly.)
- ACC will email all participants when the score report is available and you'll be able to find it within the CMP Hub of your CMP SAP.
What Happens if I DON'T PASS the CMP Performance Assessment in the Year that My Assessment Requirement is Due?
- Starting the year that your MOC assessment requirement is due, you MUST PASS THE CMP PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT EVERY YEAR to be considered as meeting your assessment requirement.
- You get two CHANCES TO PASS each year.
- If you DO NOT PASS a CMP Performance Assessment in the year that your assessment requirement is due, you won't lose your certification. Instead, you will enter an assessment grace period if all your other MOC requirements have been met. The grace period grants you an additional year to meet your assessment requirement. During the grace period, you will continue to be publicly reported as Certified. You will need to pass the traditional, 10-year MOC exam by the end of the grace period year to avoid a change to your certification status.
What Happens if I Fail Both CMP Performance Assessments in the Year that My Assessment Requirement is Due?
If you are unable to achieve a passing score on a CMP Performance Assessment in the year that your assessment requirement is due, you will enter an assessment grace period, which is explained as follows on ABIM's website:
Physicians will be granted an additional year (called the grace period) to meet their assessment requirement if they are certified, meeting all other MOC requirements, are in their assessment due year and:
- They fail the traditional, 10-year MOC exam; or
- They fail the ABIM/ACC CMP assessment; or
- They are enrolled in the LKA and exceed their 100 unopened questions; or
- They are enrolled in the LKA and do not meet the performance standard at the end of the 5th year.
During the grace period, physicians will continue to be publicly reported as Certified. They will need to pass the traditional, 10-year MOC exam by the end of the grace period year in order to avoid a change to their certification status. Once passed, a physician's next assessment due date will be 10 years from the last pass, even if that pass was during the grace period year.