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Published byMatilda Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
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Rubrics are our Friends
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Rubrics in our life
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Self Reflection What is your current view of rubrics? Write down what you know about them and what experiences you have had using them.
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Discussion Where do you find rubrics in “real life?” When do we give rubrics? What makes them meaningful? What could you use a rubric for in your current work?
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What is a rubric? rubric video
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What are Rubrics? A Rubric is a coherent set of criteria for students' work that includes descriptions of levels of performance quality on the criteria Rubrics are powerful authentic tools to assess students’ work/performance. The scoring tool lists specific criteria and each criteria or standard has a gradation scale.( Numerical, qualitative etc.) They are a teaching and learning tool. They are roadmaps for the expectations. They are for all areas of content and can be adapted Teachers can use them, and students can peer-assess as well as self- assess.
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Bottom Line Two Major Aspects: Coherent set of criteria ( What should be learned… not tasks to complete) Descriptions of levels of performance ( True descriptions)
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Rubric Pro and Cons Pros Powerful tools for assessment and instruction Give clear expectations and concrete details Define what quality entails Quick, objective, and efficient Help to justify scores Rubrics provide feedback Rubrics force teachers to clarify expectations, standards and goals Rubrics when shared first, can be motivational Cons Quite a bit of time upfront Articulating the gradations can be challenging Students might want rubrics for all assignments Must know your learning outcomes
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Characteristics of Rubrics Criteria - Must have specific list of criteria so students know exactly what the teacher is expecting. Description of levels of performance quality on each criteria : This is basically a scale based on the degree the standard has been met. (Typically 4- 6 levels of gradation)**Assignment of value if used for grading.
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Common Mistake #1 Teachers confuse learning outcomes with tasks used to assess it. Don’t focus on the product or task, focus on the proficiency the student is supposed to demonstrate. ( How many of our students are being graded o neatness and compliance)
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Learning Outcome/target: Example: “To examine or describe the process people use to make or change rules for a family, neighborhood and community… to propose rules that promote order and fairness in various situations.” What the teacher has the students do: Read novel Jumanji and answer questions from book, brainstorm list of board games they know, invent new board game –play a tournament. Lastly identify problems with the games, revise them and write advertisements to market their games.
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The rubric for this project: Comprehension Board game Tournament Participation Advertisement Grade: Did this measure learning outcomes?
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Learning Targets Discuss learning targets for the following 8 th grade language arts writing standard: “Conduct short research projects to answer a question (including a self— generated question), drawing on several sources and generating additional related, focused questions that allow for multiple avenues of exploration.”
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Descriptions of levels of performance What does student work look like at each level of quality from high to low on each level of the criterion? **equal space between each step in the criterion if using points.
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Common Mistake # 2 Teachers confuse rubrics with task lists or check sheets Show “My State Poster”
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Let’s Practice Valentine’s Day is fast approaching. What will our rubric look like for a Valentine’s Day dinner out?
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Great resources for all things rubric
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Resources http://rubricsforall.wikispaces.com/
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Making our own rubrics
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