If I hear, I forget. If I see, I remember. If I do, I understand. Rubrics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How to Develop a Rubric How to Develop a Rubric Jason Peake.
Advertisements

Rubric Design Denise White Office of Instruction WVDE.
Comprehensive Models of Formative Assessment. A theory of formative assessment.
Designing Scoring Rubrics. What is a Rubric? Guidelines by which a product is judged Guidelines by which a product is judged Explain the standards for.
Rubric Workshop Los Angeles Valley College Fall 2008.
Vivian Mun, Ed.D. Accreditation What is a rubric? A rubric is a scoring tool that lists the criteria for a piece of work, or “what counts” (for.
Chapter 8 Criteria and Validity PERSIAN GROUP. ارزیابی امتحان آزمون ارزیابی امتحان آزمون ارزیابی امتحان آزمون ارزیابی امتحان آزمون ارزیابی امتحان آزمون.
Using Rubrics for Assessment: A Primer Marcel S. Kerr Summer 2007 
Assessment Rubrics Los Angeles City College Assessment Team.
Oral Presentation Rubrics Standards-based Assessment of and for Learning.
Developing Rubrics Presented by Frank H. Osborne, Ph. D. © 2015 EMSE 3123 Math and Science in Education 1.
A framework to move from common core to classroom practice Scoring Student Work 1 K. Thiebes.
Qatar University College of Arts and Sciences Developing rubrics to assess courses Abdou Ndoye Fall 2010.
ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education Rubrics “You need to learn what rubrics are and how they can help you do a better job.
Applying Assessment to Learning
CHAPTER 3 ~~~~~ INFORMAL ASSESSMENT: SELECTING, SCORING, REPORTING.
Authentic Assessment Abdelmoneim A. Hassan. Welcome Authentic Assessment Qatar University Workshop.
Credit to Thomas R. Guskey. Systemic Change  Change is a highly complex process  Professional development is essential.
Growing Success-Making Connections
OCTOBER ED DIRECTOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT 10/1/14 POWERFUL & PURPOSEFUL FEEDBACK.
ASSESSMENT Formative, Summative, and Performance-Based
Thinking about assessment…
Assessment: Creating and Using Rubrics. Workshop Goals Review rubrics and parts of rubrics Use your assignment to create a rubric scale & dimension Peer.
Becoming a Teacher Ninth Edition
Portfolios.
Eportfolio: Tool for Student Career Development and Institutional Assessment Sally L. Fortenberry, Ph.D., and Karol Blaylock, Ph.D. Eportfolio: Tool for.
Classroom Assessments Checklists, Rating Scales, and Rubrics
Classroom Assessment A Practical Guide for Educators by Craig A
EDU 385 Education Assessment in the Classroom
Measuring Complex Achievement
Alternative Assessment
EDU 385 CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT Week 1 Introduction and Syllabus.
Performance-Based Assessment HPHE 3150 Dr. Ayers.
Communication Skills: Connecting Personally Sheridan Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning Wednesday, April 27, 2005 Michael Kunka, TCDSB Literacy.
Presented to GETSI by Ellen Iverson, SERC, Carleton College Developed as InTeGrate talk by David Steer Department of Geosciences The University of Akron.
SHOW US YOUR RUBRICS A FACULTY DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP SERIES Material for this workshop comes from the Schreyer Institute for Innovation in Learning.
Formative and Summative Evaluation. Formative Evaluation The goal of formative assessment is to Monitor student learning Provide ongoing feedback Improve.
Effective Grading Strategies Alison Morrison-Shetlar Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning Adapted from the book Effective Grading by Barbara Walvoord.
Session 4 Performance-Based Assessment
Fair and Appropriate Grading
Assessment Information from multiple sources that describes a student’s level of achievement Used to make educational decisions about students Gives feedback.
An Assessment For Learning. A rubric is a scoring tool that lists the criteria for a piece of work, or “what counts” and clearly defines gradations of.
Helping Students Focus on Learning, Not Grades
Criterion-Referenced Testing and Curriculum-Based Assessment EDPI 344.
Identifying Assessments
Writing Effective Rubrics
This work is supported by the National Science Foundation’s Transforming Undergraduate Education in STEM program within the Directorate for Education and.
By: Lisa Harris Lisa Johnson Suzanne Sprouse.  Standards drive planning  Guide Instruction  Necessary for assessment,  i.e. you are going to assess.
Assessment My favorite topic (after grammar, of course)
RUBRICS. WORKSHOP OUTCOMES Participants will evaluate different types of rubrics and what will work best for their program outcomes. Participants will.
Checklists and Rubrics EDU 300 Newberry College Jennifer Morrison.
ASSESSMENT and EVALUATION (seeing through the jargon and figuring out how to use the tools)
 Teaching: Chapter 14. Assessments provide feedback about students’ learning as it is occurring and evaluates students’ learning after instruction has.
Assessing Student Assignments Student Learning Kathleen M. Morley, Ph.D. University Director of Assessment Office of Academic Affairs Long Island University,
Tia Juana Malone, English Professor Ruth Ronan, Course Developer Assessment Strategies That Promote Student Engagement.
NOTE: To change the image on this slide, select the picture and delete it. Then click the Pictures icon in the placeholder to insert your own image. COMMON.
Chapter 6 Assessing Science Learning Updated Spring 2012 – D. Fulton.
Unit 3 Learning Styles Learning Styles Study Styles LASSI Discussion Assignment Seminar.
Designing Scoring Rubrics
Classroom Assessments Checklists, Rating Scales, and Rubrics
Classroom Assessment A Practical Guide for Educators by Craig A
Chapter 6: Checklists, Rating Scales & Rubrics
Classroom Assessments Checklists, Rating Scales, and Rubrics
Transforming Grading Robert Marzano
Designing and Using Rubrics
What Are Rubrics? Rubrics are components of:
Creating Rubrics: Guides for Instruction and Assessment
TESTING AND EVALUATION IN EDUCATION GA 3113 lecture 1
Alternative Assessment
Presentation transcript:

If I hear, I forget. If I see, I remember. If I do, I understand. Rubrics

Rubric A criteria-based scoring guideline that can be used to evaluate performance. Rubrics indicate the qualities the judge/reviewer will look for in differentiating levels of performance and assessing achievement. 2

Scoring Rubrics Holistic Rubric Analytic Rubric –Checklist Rubric –Rating Scale Rubric Holistic vs. Analytic: one or several judgments? 3

Rubric that requires a teacher to rate or score a student’s product or process as whole without first scoring parts or components separately. Holistic A rule that you use to rate or score that separate parts or traits (dimensions) of a student’s product or process first then sum these part scores to obtain a total score. Analytic 4

RubricDefinitionAdvantagesLimitations HolisticAll criteria (dimensions, traits) are evaluated simultaneously faster View the performance as a whole (paper, product) Resembles real life assessment-use of information Less time for inter-rater reliability Good for summative (no feedback) No focus on details one overall score Less precise than analytical not good for formative Doesn’t communicates how to improve AnalyticEach criterion (dimension, trait) is evaluated separately Identifies strengths and weaknesses of each participant for each dimension Some key elements may be given higher weight in scoring More precise than holistic Appropriate to assess achievement of the skill Diagnostic tool-feedback Link to instruction & outcomes Scoring is slower Difficult to identify well defined elements Longer time for inter rater reliability 5

Checklist Rubric Checklist for a web site The purpose of the site is obvious. The site’s structure is clear and intuitive. Titles are meaningful. Each page looks meaningful. The text is easy to read. Graphics and multimedia help convey the site’s main points. Spelling, punctuation and grammar are correct. Contact information for the author or webmaster is given. The date each page was last updated is given. Source: Suskie, L. (2004) Assessing Student Learning: A Common Sense Guide. Anker Publishing Company, Bolton, MA. 6

Rating scales A checklist with a rating scale added to show the degree to which these things were present in the assignment. A rubric translates the standards and criteria that make up grading into some sort of a chart or a description. Articulating in writing what precisely is an A on a particular assignment or task? How is different from a “B” or a “C” To be Shared with students along with the assignment, the task, not in first day of class, not after you grade the task. 7

8

Instructions: Write the names of each member of the group, including yourself, in the boxes in the first column. Using the key that follows, circle the number that represents your opinion on your and the group member's performance on each item. Scale: 3=Outstanding 2=More than satisfactory 1=Satisfactory 0=Less than satisfactory Group Members (list by name) Worked cooperatively to complete assignments Attended and participated in meetings Supported and respected other members' efforts and opinions Prepared adequately for meetings Made substantial contributions to group's understandings - shared ideas, resources, information Additional Comments: Example of assessing group work 9

Clarity of criteria Each criteria is distinct, clearly delineated and fully appropriate for the assignment(s)/course Distinction between Levels Each level is distinct and progresses in a clear and logical order Reliability of Scoring Cross-scoring of assignments using rubric results in consistent agreement among scorers A Rubric for Rubrics

Clarity of Expectations/ Guidance to Learners Rubric serves as primary reference point for discussion and guidance for assignments as well as evaluation of assignment(s) Support of Metacognition (Awareness of Learning) Rubric is regularly referenced and used to help learners identify the skills and knowledge they are developing throughout the course/ assignment(s) Engagement of learners in Rubric Development/use Faculty and learners are jointly responsible for design of rubrics and learners use them in peer and/or self- evaluation

Advantages of a Rubric For the Professor - Objective and consistent ; Clarify criteria in specific terms ; Feedback vehicle ; Benchmarks against which to measure and document progress ; Make scoring faster and easier; Help tie performance to outcomes. For Students - Help define "quality“; Awareness of criteria; Understand expectations; Help judge and revise their own work ; Shows how their work will be evaluated and what is expected; How to improve performance. 12

One who knows the others Is wise. One who knows himself Is blessed.

FIM THE END

God gave us two ears and one mouth to show us that we must listen more and speak less.

Yesterday is a story, tomorrow is a mystery, today is a gift