Rubrics are often used to assess students' work in a given area. Below is a generic writing rubric that may help clarify the format that is used for scoring. Rubrics are typically given to children before instruction begins in order for students to know what they will learn in the unit of study and be held accountable for. Generic Writing Rubric SCORE POINT 0 These papers are not scoreable because they are blank or fail in other ways to respond to the assignment. They include: � papers that do not respond to the required task � papers in which the student has merely written a word or a brief phrase with no indication of an attempt to attend to the task � papers that are incoherent � papers that reply, "I don't know" � papers that merely copy or paraphrase the assignment � papers that are illegible � papers that are written entirely in a language other than English � black papers � papers which copy a known fairy tale or rhyme � papers that copy a definition of some part of the stimulus from a dictionary or other reference source SCORE POINT 1 These papers attempt to address the topic but are not successful. The following kinds of papers fall into this category: papers that respond to the stimulus in a skeletal and brief way papers that contain a sequence of events but are too sparse to be minimally successful papers that attend very briefly to the task but do not remain on the topic papers that are poorly organized or contain major gaps papers that do not include a sequence of events papers that exhibit a lack of control of written language, i.e., confused syntax, extensive misspellings of basic words, or confused thoughts, so that communication is impaired SCORE POINT 2 These papers respond minimally to the task with expressive writing presented in the narrative mode. The following types of papers fall into this category: papers that contain a somewhat elaborated sequence of events papers that contain a bare, tightly controlled, linked sequence of events papers characterized by limited control of written language, i.e., word choice may be limited, syntax may be awkward or simplistic, or errors in usage may occur SCORE 3 These papers represent good attempts at telling a story. There is no difficulty following the story line. The elaboration contained in these responses is controlled, adding substance to the story line. The following types of papers fall into this category: papers that present a moderately well-elaborated sequence of events papers which incorporate an organizational strategy, although brief digressions or lapses may occur papers that exhibit a control of written language characterized by clarity of expression and effective word choice (If on the other hand, the author works so hard at being different that he/she sounds like a talking dictionary, then he or she, also, merits this rating.) papers that seldom include personal details, examples or comments (While the piece may be correct, it lacks the personal touch. The voice seems bland, careful, a little flat, and not very interesting.) SCORE 4 These papers are consistent, organized, and elaborated narratives. These responses are unified and easy to read. The few inconsistencies that may occur are overwhelmed by the quality of the response. These papers are characterized by most of the following: papers that have a clear sense of beginning and ending with clear and consistent situations papers which follow a narrative progression and are consistent in organizational strategy papers that indicate explicitly the writer's attitudes and feelings (Expressing personal experiences, the writer come through as an individual, and his/her work seems like his/hers and his/hers alone. The voice in the piece really interests us.) ideas may be insightful, creative and original, or rational and logical, but are always expressed with clarity Sources: Scoring Criteria for Written Composition, Texas Education Agency The Writing Report Card, 1985-88 prepared by Educational Testing Service, Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education Evaluating Writing: Describing, Measuring, Judging by Charles Cooper and Lee Odell |
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