Interview Evaluations

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Presentation transcript:

Interview Evaluations

Interview Evaluations Voice & Pronunciation Memorization Question & Answer Content Interview Evaluations The interview presentations are evaluated on four aspects. Each aspect has a possible 5 points which are then added together for a possible total 20 points.

Evaluation Sheet

Content 1 point: The presentation is messy, not understandable, or way too short. 2 points: The presentation is messy, difficult to understand, or too short. 3 points: The presentation was short and/or consisted of mostly example sentences with no creativity or thought. 4 points: The students met the length requirements and created a neat, understandable presentation. 5 points: The student surpassed the length requirement and/or showed extra creativity.

Examples of Ideal Content

Memorization 1 point: The student reads their presentation in a flat voice or cannot remember their presentation at all and gives up. 2 points: The student refers to their script a few times but has memorized most of it. 3 points: The student has it completely memorized and does not look at their script, though the presentation has long pauses. 4 points: The presentation is completely memorized with only a couple short pauses. 5 points: The presentation is completely memorized, no pauses, and the student makes eye contact.

Voice & Pronunciation 1 point: The presentation is not understandable due to pronunciation errors, mumbling, or nearly silent voice. 2 points: The presentation is barely understandable due to pronunciation errors, mumbling, or quiet voice. 3 points: The presentation is difficult to understand due to many pronunciation errors, mumbling, or quiet voice. 4 points: There are a few pronunciation errors but the student speaks clearly and loud. 5 points: The student speaks with few or no pronunciation errors in a clear, loud voice with correct intonation.

The student cannot answer either question and does not try to. Question & Answer 1 point: The student cannot answer either question and does not try to. 2 points: The student takes a very long time to answer and cannot answer correctly even when the questions are repeated. 3 points: The student answers one question correctly but cannot answer the second. 4 points: The student answers both questions correctly but does not use complete sentences. 5 points: The student answers both questions correctly, quickly, and in complete sentences.

Examples of Ideal Presentations Four Video Examples