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Assessment

How Do Rubrics Help?

How students and teachers understand the standards against which work will be measured.

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Rubrics are multidimensional sets of scoring guidelines that can be used to provide consistency in evaluating student work. They spell out scoring criteria so that multiple teachers, using the same rubric for a student's essay, for example, would arrive at the same score or grade. Rubrics are used from the initiation to the completion of a student project. They provide a measurement system for specific tasks and are tailored to each project, so as the projects become more complex, so do the rubrics.

How can rubrics help? Rubrics

Assessment Teaching Module: Geometry in the Real World: Students as Architects

Eeva Reeder extols the power behind using scoring rubrics:

"It demystifies grades, and most importantly, helps students see that the whole object of schoolwork is attainment and refinement of problem-solving and life skills."

  • let students know what is expected of them.
  • demystify grades by clearly stating, in age-appropriate vocabulary, the expectations for a project.
  • help students see that learning is about gaining specific skills (both in academic subjects and in problem-solving and life skills).
  • give students the opportunity to do self-assessment to reflect on the learning process.
  • help a teacher authentically monitor a student's learning process and develop and revise a lesson plan.
  • provide a way for a student and a teacher to measure the quality of a body of work. When a student's assessment of his or her work and a teacher's assessment don't agree, they can schedule a conference to let the student explain his or her understanding of the content and justify the method of presentation.

Types of Rubrics

Team Rubric

A team rubric is a guideline that lets each team member know what is expected of him or her. For example, a team rubric

  • contains detailed descriptions for tasks that will be done while the students are working as a team.
  • states acceptable degrees of behavior.
  • defines the consequences for a team member who is not participating.
  • lists actions or tasks required of each team member for the completion of a successful project, such as the following:
    • Did the person participate in the planning process?
    • How involved was each member?
    • Was the team member's work to the best of his or her ability?
    • Shows the quantitative value of the behaviors or actions.

"For as long as assessment is viewed as something we do 'after' teaching and learning are over, we will fail to greatly improve student performance, regardless of how well or how poorly students are currently taught or motivated."

--Grant Wiggins, EdD., president and director of programs, Relearning by Design, Ewing, New Jersey

Project Rubric

A project rubric lists the requirements for the completion of a project-based-learning lesson. It is usually some sort of presentation: a word-processed document, a poster, a model, a multimedia presentation, or a combination of presentations.

The teacher can create a project rubric, or students can collaborate, helping set goals for the project and suggest how their work should be evaluated. Together, the teacher and the students can answer the following questions:

  • What is the quality of the work?
  • How do you know the content is accurate?
  • How well was the presentation delivered?
  • How well was the presentation designed?
  • What was the main idea?

Sample Rubrics

Look at these rubrics from several Web sites, which show team rubrics and project rubrics for various subjects and grade levels.

After you've reviewed the sites, discuss the following:

  • What do you think of the different styles?
  • Do they meet your expectations of rubrics for the designated grade levels? Why, or why not?
  • Which one most closely suits your vision of what you will need? Why?

For additional rubric ideas, visit the Assessment & Rubric Information page in Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators at DiscoverySchool.com.


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0
was this helpful?
Glenda Hoth
Posted on 12/05/2008 8:30am

Assessments are important for the teacher to know what the student has learned and if they are ready to go to the next level. They also let the student know where they are lacking understanding.

Our classrooms are made up of many different types of learners and this site showed that there are assessments for every type learner. I am one that does not believe the standardized test is a fair way to test all students. For the student that freezes at the work "test", a portfolio or an assessment based on their performance may be a better way to assess this student. Especially with our growing population of ESL students we must look at assessments such as observations & interviewing. This site gave good examples that we can use in the classroom.

A Rubric is the great instrument for the instructor and student. The rubric lets the teacher and student know exactly what is expected in each step of the assignment and what each step is worth.It provides the student a visual guide for them to use when completing an assignment. This is a step by step instructional guide for the student to earn the most possible points.

0
was this helpful?
David Pepper MD
Posted on 1/14/2009 6:11am

Medical Education

This is a great resource that applies in higher education too. I teach at the Medical School and Residency Levls (Internship and 2+ years after medical school) and many of these ideas are missing from education at our level.

This page lays out in a simple way, the use and formulation of rubrics, and provides to several good examples and links.

Thanks

David Pepper MD
UCSF and UCD Medical Educaton Programs

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