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Scoring Rubrics

These are descriptive scoring schemes that are developed by teachers to guide the analysis of the products or processes of students efforts.

Criteria Setting
Criteria are statements which identify what really counts in the final output.
Example: Quality Creativity Comprehensiveness Accuracy Aesthetics

Identify substatements that would make the major criteria more focused and objective.
Example: Essay on The Three Hundred Years of Spanish Rules in the Philippines Quality Interrelates the chronological events in an interesting manner Identifies the key players in each period of the Spanish rule and the roles that they played Succeeds in relating the history of Philippine Spanish rule

Example of a scoring rubric designed to evaluate college writing samples


Major Criterion: Meets Expectations for a first Draft of a Professional Report Substatements: The document can be easily followed. A combination of the following are apparent in the document:
1. 2. 3. Effective transitions are used through. A professional format is used. The graphics are descriptive and clearly support the documents purpose.

The document is clear and concise and appropriate grammar is used throughout * Adequate The document can be easily followed. A combination of the followingare apparent in the document:
1. 2. 3. Basic transitions are used, Structured format is used. Some supporting graphics are provided, but are not clearly explained.

The document contains minimal distractions that appear in a combination of the following forms:
1. 2. 3. Flow in thought Graphical presentations Grammar/mechanics

Organization of document is difficult to follow due to a combination of the following:


1. 2. 3. 4. Inadequate transitions Rambling format Insufficient or irrelevant information Ambiguous graphics

The document contains numerous distractions that appear in the combination of the following forms:
1. 2. 3. Flow in thought Graphical presentation Grammar/mechanics

There appears to be no organization of the documents contents Sentences are difficult to read and understand

When are scoring rubrics an appropriate evaluation technique?

Essay Evaluate group activities Oral presentations


Where and when a scoring rubric is used does not depend on the grade level or subject, but rather on the purpose of the assessment

Other Methods
Checklists are appropriate for evaluation when the information that is sought is limited to the determination of whether specific criteria have been met. Scoring rubrics are based on descriptive scales and support the evaluation of the extent to which criteria have been met. If the purpose of assessment have been met
Benefits of scoring rubrics: 1. They support the examination of the extent to which the specified criteria have been reached. 2. They provide feedback to students concerning how to improve their performances

Process of Developing Scoring Rubrics


Steps 1. Identify the qualities and attributes that you wish to observe in the students outputs that would demonstrate their level of proficiency 2. Decide whether a holistic or analytical rubric would be appropriate In analytic scoring rubric, each criteria is considered one by one and the descriptions of the scoring levels are made separately while in holistic rubric, the collection of criteria is considered throughout the construction of each level of the scoring rubric and the result is a single descriptive scoring schemes.

3. Identify and define the criteria for the top level and lowest level of performance 4. Create additional categories such as average, etc. Each score category should be defined using descriptors of the work rather than value-judgment about the work Example: Students sentences contain no errors in subject-verb agreements, is preferable than students sentences are good

5. Test whether scoring rubric is reliable. Ask two or more teachers to score the same set of projects or outputs and correlate their individual assessments

Exercise
For each of the following, develop a scoring rubrics:
a. Evaluating performance in argumentation and debate b. Laboratory output in Frog dissection c. Oral presentation on the piece Land Bondage, Land of the Free d. Essay on Should the power industry be deregulated? e. Group activity on Geometric shapes through paper folding

Guidelines for Stating Performance Criteria


1. Identify the steps or features of the performance or task to be assessed imagining yourself performing it, observing students performing it or inspecting finished products. 2. List the important criteria of the performance or product.

3. Try to keep the performance criteria few so that they can be reasonably observed and judged.

4.

Have teachers think through the criteria as a group. Express the criteria in terms of observable student behavior or product characteristics. Avoid vague and ambiguous words like correctly, appropriately, and good. Arrange the performance assessment instruments to use or modify them before constructing them.

5.

6.

7.

Scoring Rubric for Response Journal Questions


3 Excellent. Answers are very complete and accurate. Most answers are supported with specific information from the reading, including direct quotations Sentence structure is varied and detailed Mechanics are accurate, including spelling, use of capitals, and appropriate punctuation. 2 Good. Answers are usually complete and accurate. These answers are supported with specific information from the reading. Sentence structure is varied. Mechanics are generally accurate including spelling, use of capitals, and appropriate punctuation. 1 Needs Improvement. Answers are inaccurate. These answers need to be supported with specific information. Sentence structure is incomplete. Mechanics need significant improvement.

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