teaching with writing
creating grading rubrics
for writing assignments
Pamela Flash
Establishing
and discussing specific characteristics of success when an assignment
is first distributed benefits both students and instructors. Creating
grading rubrics, or grids, is a typical way to do this. Having received
the criteria with an assignment, students are able to write toward specific
goals. Later, when they look at their grades, they can see at a glance
the strengths and weaknesses of their work. Instructors are able to grade
according to customized descriptive criteria that reflect the intention
of a specific assignment and won't change according to the hour of night
or the amount of effort a particular student is suspected of expending.
Rubrics can also save on grading time, as they allow instructors to detail
comments on one or two elements and simply indicate ratings on others.
Finally, grading rubrics are invaluable in courses that involve more than
one instructor, as in team-taught or multi-sectioned courses, because
they ensure that all instructors are measuring work by the same standards.
Step One:
Identifying criteria
The first
step involved in creating assignment-specific rubrics is revisiting an
assignment's intended outcomes. These objectives can be considered, prioritized,
and reworded to create a rubric's criteria. If, for example, an instructor
assigns a literature review hoping that students might become skilled
at reducing complex texts down to pithy summaries, "concise summary" can be one of the grading criteria included in the rubric.
Care must
be taken to keep the list of criteria from becoming unwieldy; ten ranked
items is usually the upper limit. In addition, to be usefully translated
and used by students, criteria should be specific and descriptive. Criteria
like "clear," "organized," and "interesting" don't mean much to students when they sit down to revise.
Step Two:
Weighing criteria
When criteria
have been identified, decisions are made about their varying importance.
Say, for example, that an essay is assigned by a geography professor who
intends for students to become skilled at creating concrete and accurate
observation-based descriptions, practiced in analyzing their data and
in devising a land-use proposal, and able to create correctly-formatted,
error-free prose. When creating a grading rubric for that assignment,
the instructor will need to decide on the relative weight of each criterion.
Is the error-free prose objective equal to the analysis objective?
Step Three:
Describing levels of success
When the
criteria have been set, decisions must be made about an assessment scale.
Many instructors like to limit this section of the rubric to a three-point
scale ("weak," "satisfactory," "strong").
Others may prefer to break this down into five or six levels, adding categories
like "needs extensive revision," or "outstanding."
Step Four:
Creating and distributing the grid:
When the
specific criteria and levels of success have been named and ranked, they
can be sorted into a table (see samples below) and distributed with the
assignment. Note that spaces are created for comments on each item and
again at the end.
Sample #1
| |
weak |
satisfactory |
strong |
Insights
and ideas that are germane to the assignment |
|
|
|
| Address
of target audience |
|
|
|
| Choices
and uses of evidence |
|
|
|
| Logic
of organization and use of prescribed formats |
|
|
|
| Integration
of source materials |
|
|
|
| Grammar
and mechanics |
|
|
|
| Comments: |
| Final
Grade ____ |
Sample
#2
1=not present 2=needs extensive revision 3=satisfactory 4=strong 5=outstanding
|
Insights
and ideas
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
|
Address
of target audience
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
|
Organization
and use of prescribed formats
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
|
Integration
of source materials
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
|
Grammar
and mechanics
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
| Comments: |
| Final
Grade ____ |
|