2. Credits
• Materials in this handout were compiled from the following web
sites.
– http://www.carla.umn.edu/assessment/VAC/Evaluation/p_4.html
– http://jonathan.mueller.faculty.noctrl.edu/toolbox/rubrics.htm
– http://rubistar.4teachers.org
– http://valenciacc.edu/learningevidence/rubrics.asp
– http://faculty.sacredheart.edu/stiltnerb/students/rubrics.htm
09/17/12 2
3. Introduction
• In this workshop we:
– Explore how to create tools for grading
complex assignments.
– Explore the purpose and characteristics of
rubrics.
– Use RubiStar as a tool for creating a rubric.
• At the end of the session,
– You will have drafted a rubric for an
assignment.
– Given and received feedback from a
colleague on your rubric.
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4. Workshop Objectives
• By the end of the workshop you should
be able to:
– Describe a rubric (what is it?)
– Describe the purpose of rubrics.
– Describe the difference between holistic and
analytic rubrics.
– List the characteristics of good rubrics.
– Develop a rubric for judging the quality of a
product (chocolate chip cookie).
– Create/modify a rubric for an assignment or
activity in a class you teach.
– Identify strengths and weaknesses in a rubric.
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5. What’s a rubric?
• Analytic rubrics have
– Levels of performance
– Multiple criteria
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6. The TLT defines rubrics as:
• "Rubrics" explicitly state criteria for
assignments.
• May lead to a grade or be part of
the grading process.
• Are more specific, detailed, and
disaggregated than a grade.
• Show strengths and weaknesses in
student work.
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7. Another definition (Jon Mueller. Professor of
Psychology, North Central College)
• Assess student performance along
a task-specific set of criteria
• Measures performance against a
predetermined criteria
• Includes essential criteria for the
task
• Has multiple levels of performance
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8. Example: Research Project
(Jon Mueller. Professor of Psychology, North Central College)
Criteria 3 2 1
Number of X1 10-12 5-9 1-4
Sources
Historical X3 No apparent Few Lots of historical
Accuracy inaccuracies inaccuracies inaccuracies
Organization X1 Can easily tell Can tell with Cannot tell from
which sources difficulty where which source
info was drawn information information
from came from came from
Bibliography X1 All relevant Contains most Contains very
information is relevant little information
included information
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9. One-Sentence Summary
On a 3x5 note card:
Write a one-sentence summary that:
1. Defines a rubric.
2. Differentiates between performance levels and criteria.
3. Explains column weight.
When directed by facilitator, share your sentences with a partner.
Combine your two sentences into one that can be shared with the group.
09/17/12 Lesson Builder Page 4 9
10. Characteristics of Rubrics
• Increase an assessment's construct and
content validity
• Increase an assessment's reliability
– set criteria that raters can apply consistently
and objectively
• Established criteria reduces bias
• Can help teachers clarify goals and
improve their teaching
• Help learners set goals and assume
responsibility for their learning
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11. Characteristics Continued
• Help learners develop their ability to
judge quality in their own and
others' work
• Provides specific feedback about
areas of strength and weakness
• Learners can use rubrics to assess
their own effort and performance
before submitting it
09/17/12 11
12. Characteristics Continued
• Learners and teachers monitor
progress over a period of instruction
• Reduces time spent grading
• Engaging students in the design
empowers them
• Moves away from subjective
grading
09/17/12 12
13. Which of these reasons are
important to you?
• Importance of Reliability
• Validity of the assessment
• Reduction of bias in grading
• Clarifying goals for you as the teacher
• Communicating expectations to students
• Improve students ability to judge their own
performance
• Means for providing better feedback to
students
09/17/12 Page 5 Lesson Builder 13
14. Types of Rubrics
• Ask yourself:
– For a particular task, do you want to
be able to assess how well the students
perform on each criterion, or do you
want to get a more global picture of
the students' performance on the
entire task?
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15. Holistic
• a holistic rubric does not list
separate levels of performance for
each criterion
• a holistic rubric assigns a level of
performance by assessing
performance across multiple criteria
as a whole.
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16. Holistic Example
3 - Excellent Researcher
• included 10-12 sources
• no apparent historical inaccuracies
• can easily tell which sources information was drawn from
• all relevant information is included
2 - Good Researcher
• included 5-9 sources
• few historical inaccuracies
• can tell with difficulty where information came from
• bibliography contains most relevant information
1 - Poor Researcher
• included 1-4 sources
• lots of historical inaccuracies
• cannot tell from which source information came
• bibliography contains very little information
09/17/12 16
17. Analytic Rubric
Criteria 3 2 1
Number of X1 10-12 5-9 1-4
Sources
Historical X3 No apparent Few Lots of historical
Accuracy inaccuracies inaccuracies inaccuracies
Organization X1 Can easily tell Can tell with Cannot tell from
which sources difficulty where which source
info was drawn information information
from came from came from
Bibliography X1 All relevant Contains most Contains very
information is relevant little information
included information
09/17/12 17
18. When to choose an analytic
rubric
• Want to assess each criterion
separately
• Involve large number of criteria
• More variance across the criteria
• Need to weight criteria differently
09/17/12 18
19. Types of Rubrics Activity
• In the Lesson Builder materials, page
6, you will find a sorting activity.
09/17/12 19
20. Designing an Analytic Rubric
• Step 1. Re-examine learning objective to be
addressed by the task.
• Step 2. Identify observable attributes you want to
see (as well as those you don’t want to see) your
students demonstrate in the product, process, or
performance.
• Step 3. Brainstorm characteristics of each attribute.
09/17/12 20
21. Design Analytic Continued
• Step 4b. Write thorough narrative
description for excellent and poor work for
each individual attribute.
• Step 5b. Complete the rubric by describing
other levels on the continuum that ranges
from excellent to poor for each attribute.
09/17/12 21
22. Hint: Use Even Number of
Levels
• Use an even number (4 or 6) of levels
of performance on the scale.
• When there are an odd number of
levels, the middle level tends to
become a catch-all category.
• With an even number of levels, raters
have to make a more precise judgment
about a performance when its quality is
not at the top or bottom of the scale.
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23. Hint: Arrange Levels High to
Low
• High to low scale.
• Students read first the description of
an exemplary performance in each
criterion.
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24. Sample High to Lows
4 3 2 1
Exemplary Excellent Acceptable Unacceptable
Exceeds Meets Progressing Not there yet
expectations expectations
Superior Good Fair Needs work
09/17/12 24
25. More Hints
• Limited number of dimensions or criteria.
– The criteria are those components that are
most important to evaluate in the given task
and instructional context.
– A rubric with too many dimensions may be
unworkable in classroom assessment.
• Equal steps along the scale.
– The difference between 4 and 3 should be
equivalent to the difference between 3 - 2
and 2 - 1.
– "Yes, and more", "Yes", "Yes, but", and "No"
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26. 4 3 2 1
Task All Most Some Very few or none
Frequency Always Usually Some of the time Rarely or not at
all
Accuracy No errors Few errors Some errors Frequent errors
Comprehen Always Almost always Gist and main Isolated bits are
sibility comprehen comprehensible ideas are comprehensible
sible comprehensible
Content Fully Adequately Partially Minimally
coverage developed, developed, developed, developed,
fully adequately partially supported minimally
supported supported supported
Vocabulary
Range Broad Adequate Limited Very limited
Variety Highly Varied; occasionally Lacks variety; Memorized;
varied; non- repetitive repetitive highly repetitive
repetitive
09/17/12 26
27. Chocolate Chip Cookies
• Break into pairs.
• Compete the worksheet Creating a Rubric.
• Create a rubric for judging the quality of a
chocolate chip cookie.
– -Be sure to decide if you want to do a holistic or
analytic rubric!!!!
– Be prepared to defend your decision.
• Use the handout on Rubric Examples to help
you when you get stuck!
• When you all finished, you will get to judge
the cookies using the different rubrics.
09/17/12 See Lesson Builder Page 9 for 27
Handouts
28. Using RubiStar
• These are some simple steps for
getting started with Rubistar.
• Access the site
http://rubistar.4teachers.org.
• Take a moment to read about the
different features.
• When you are ready to get started,
click on the tutorial and choose the
option you prefer.
09/17/12 28
29. Rubistar Tips
• If you are using Internet Explorer, you can
copy the rubric and paste it into a Word
document where you can continue to edit.
• When first getting started, you might want to
choose an existing template.
• You may find that you can create a rubric you
like by combining existing rubrics into one of
your own.
– You can do this by opening two windows to
Rubistar and copying and pasting between
windows.
09/17/12 29
30. Assignment
• Create a rubric for an
objective/competency you have for a
class you teach.
• Use the worksheet on creating a rubric
to get you started.
• Divide into teams.
• Exchange rubrics and use the Aunt
Olive's Rubric on Rubrics to provide
feedback to a colleague on their work.
09/17/12 Lesson Builder Page 10 30
31. Review
1. Describe a rubric (what is it).
2. Describe the purpose of rubrics.
3. Describe the difference between holistic
and analytic rubrics.
4. List the characteristics of good rubrics.
5. Develop a rubric for judging the quality of a
product (chocolate chip cookie).
6. Create/modify a rubric for an assignment or
activity in a class you teach.
7. Identify strengths and weaknesses in a
rubric.
09/17/12 31
Notas do Editor
Introduction and welcome Sign-in if appropriate Share something cool about yourself. Share expectations Look at my feet and guess example
Give credits.
Discuss points above…Page 3 LB, page 3 handout
Review objectives and relate to their expectations. Page 2 LB, page 2 handout
Page 4 LB, page 5 handout Explain how the printed handout works, where to find the materials in Blackboard, and slideshare.net/chedisky/slideshows Common rubrics are designed in a matrix. Many rubrics are designed as a matrix with Levels of performance across the columns (top) Criterion along the rows on the left.
Page 4 LB, page 5 handout TLT--Teaching, Learning, Technology Group which manages the Flashlight Projects developed this http://www.tltgroup.org/resources/Flashlight/Rubrics.htm
LB page 4, handout page 5 Jon Mueller http://jonathan.mueller.faculty.noctrl.edu/toolbox/rubrics.htm That is, a student's aptitude on a task is determined by matching the student's performance against a set of criteria to determine the degree to which the student's performance meets the criteria for the task. To measure student performance against a pre-determined set of criteria, a rubric, or scoring scale, is typically created which contains the essential criteria for the task and appropriate levels of performance for each criterion.
Page 4 LB, page 6 handout Modified from Jon Mueller--changed the order of the performance levels so goes from good to poor. Eliminated extra words. Discussion points: 1) performance levels across the top, 2) critical criteria in the 1st column, 3) weighting in column two, 4) goes from excellent (3) to poor (1). Forces the student to read the good before seeing the poor level.
PAGE 4 LB
Page 5 in LB, page 8 handout Well-designed rubrics increase an assessment's construct and content validity by aligning evaluation criteria to standards, curriculum, instruction, and assessment tasks. Well-designed rubrics increase an assessment's reliability by setting criteria that raters can apply consistently and objectively. Evaluating student work by established criteria reduces bias. Identifying the most salient criteria for evaluating a performance and writing descriptions of excellent performance can help teachers clarify goals and improve their teaching. Rubrics help learners set goals and assume responsibility for their learning—they know what comprises an optimal performance and can strive to achieve it. From: University of Minnesota’s Virtual Assessment Center http://www.carla.umn.edu/assessment/VAC/Evaluation/p_5.html
Page 5 in handout continued Rubrics used for self- and peer-assessment help learners develop their ability to judge quality in their own and others' work. Learners receive specific feedback about their areas of strength and weakness and about how to improve their performance. Learners can use rubrics to assess their own effort and performance, and make adjustments to work before submitting it for a grade.
Page 5 Lesson Builder Rubrics allow learners, teachers, and other stakeholders to monitor progress over a period of instruction. Time spent evaluating performance and providing feedback can be reduced. When students participate in designing rubrics, they are empowered to become self-directed learners. Rubrics help teachers move away from subjective grading by allowing them and others, including students themselves, to assess work based on consistent, often agreed upon, and objective criteria.
Page 5 in LB, page 10 in handout Can access in PPT in slideshare (slideshare.net/chedisky/slideshows) or in LB in Blackboard. Each link goes to a poll at PollDaddy. Students can link to this from the LB on page 5
Page 6 in LB, page 11 handout
Page 6 LB, handout page 11
Page 6 LB, page 12 handout
Page 6 LB
Page 6 LB, page 12 handout
Do activity in LB…sorting of holistic vs analytic characteristics.
Page 15 handout, Briefly cover the steps. (do not refer to LB at this point)
Page 15 handout Continue quick review of steps without reference to handout.
Page 8 LB, page 16 handout
Page 8 LB, page 17 handout
Page 8 LB, page 17 handout
Page 8 LB, page 17 handout
Page 8 LB, page 18 handout
Page 9 LB. Page 19 handout The handout includes the examples and form from the LB lesson. Students can open the pdf forms from LB to do this assignment. They can reference the handout if they want a hard copy. Be sure that they see that the form includes options for either holistic or analytic.
Page 10 LB, page 30 handout
Page 10 LB, page 30 handout
Page 10 LB. Can access pdf from by clicking on Creating a Rubric
Rewiew from page 12, page 33 handout (page 11 is resources)