Designing Rubrics Ahmad Zubir bin Jamil Faculty of
Designing Rubrics Ahmad Zubir bin Jamil Faculty of Electrical Engineering University Teknikal Malaysia Melaka Adapted from: Baggio, C. (n. d. ). Tips for designing rubrics. Retrieved on March 20, 2009, from www. sdst. org/shs/library/powerpoint/rubrics. ppt and
Designing Rubrics Students as Self Assessors Teachers as Focused Coaches
What is a rubric? • A rubric is a guideline for rating student performance. • Benefits: – The rubric provides those doing the assessment with exactly the characteristics for each level of performance on which they should base their judgment. – The rubric provides those who have been assessed with clear information about how well they performed. – The rubric also provides those who have been assessed with a clear indication of what they need to accomplish in the future to better their performance. Asmus, E, (1999). Rubrics. Retrieved on March 20, 2009, from http: //www. music. miami. edu/assessment/rubrics. html
What is a rubric? • Quality Continuum • A rubric must define the range of possible performance levels. Within this range are different levels of performance which are organized from the lowest level to the highest level of performance. Usually, a scale of possible points is associated with the continuum where the highest level receives the greatest number of points and the lowest level of performance receives the fewest points.
What is a rubric? • • • A rubric is a lesson in quality A public declaration of expectations A communication tool A self-assessment tool for learners A gauge for examining performance A self-fulfilling prophecy
What is a rubric? • Quality Continuum PERFORMANCE LEVEL POINTS Excellent 4 90 -100 Good 3 80 -89 Satisfactory 2 70 -79 Needs Improvement Clearly unsatisfactory 1 60 -69 0 <60
Rubric vs. Checklist for a friendly letter • Date, flush left at top • Address • Greeting • Body • Salutation • Signature
Rubric vs. Checklist • Checklists have not judgment of quality. • Checklists can only be used when “present or absent” is a sufficient criterion for quality.
Rubric vs. Checklist • Rubrics include descriptors for each targeted criterion. • Rubrics provide a scale which differentiates among the descriptors.
What is a rubric? • Descriptors • Each level of performance should have descriptors which clearly indicate what is necessary to achieve that level of performance. • Example Organization of Thought (4 -points): “Work is clearly organized and includes a diagram or step-by-step analysis. ” criterion point value descriptor
The parts of a rubric:
Determining Standards of Excellence • How many degrees of quality should you include? • Should you use language or numbers? If language, what descriptive terms should you use? • Should you weigh the items?
Criteria • • • The specific areas for assessment Focus areas for instruction Clear and relevant Age appropriate Form and function represented Objectives
Indicators • Descriptors of level of performance for the criteria Conclusion includes whether the findings supported the hypothesis, possible sources of error, and what was learned from the experiment. • Clear, observable language • Examples for learners
How do rubrics alter instruction? • The teacher commits to teaching quality. • The teacher commits to assisting the student selfassess. • The focus is on each product and/or performance. • The labels are removed from students. • Specificity appears in all communications. • Everyone gives and receives feedback.
Whom does a rubric assist? • It is a feedback system for students to judge a product or performance. • It is a feedback tool for teachers to provide clear, focused coaching to the learner. • It is a system that promotes consistent and meaningful feedback over time. • It is a communication tool for parents.
What makes a quality RUBRIC? • An even number of standards of excellence • Clear essential criteria • Realistic number of criteria • Explicit, observable indicators • If points… clear to students upfront • Deliberate sequence of criteria • High interjudge reliability • Tested out with students
What makes a good judge? • Knowledge and experience with specific skill • Practice with rubri. • Objectivity • Questions rubric in advance to be sure all participants understand
How do I get started? • Critique current models. • Ask students to define “quality” in relation to specific product or performance. • Translate into a modest rubric.
Expert Input Experts agree: – Rubrics are hard to design. – Rubrics are time-consuming to design. – “A rubric is only as useful as it is good. Using a bad rubric is a waste of time…” --Michael Simkins in “Designing Great Rubrics” Experts disagree: – How to design a “good” rubric Bottom line: Is it working for you and for your students?
Holistic Or Analytic—Which To Use? HOLISTIC Views product or performance as a whole; describes characteristics of different levels of performance. Criteria are summarized for each score level.
Holistic Or Analytic—Which To Use? • Excellent Researcher – – • 2 - Good Researcher – – • included 10 -12 sources no apparent historical inaccuracies can easily tell which sources information was drawn from all relevant information is 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
Holistic Or Analytic? HOLISTIC—pros and cons + Takes less time to create. + Effectively determines a “not fully developed” performance as a whole + Efficient for large group scoring; less time to assess - Not diagnostic - Student may exhibit traits at two or more levels at the same time.
Holistic Or Analytic? Analytic Separate facets of performance are defined, independently valued, and scored. Facets scored separately
Holistic Or Analytic? Analytic—pros and cons + Sharper focus on target + Specific feedback (matrix) + Instructional emphasis - Time consuming - Takes skill and practice
Task specific or general? Task specific: Rubric designed for and references a specific assignment. General: Rubric designed for and references a type of assignment frequently repeated.
Tip #1 • Use as many generalized rubrics as possible. – Efficient – Builds recognition of excellence
Tip #2 • If using pre-designed rubrics carefully consider quality and appropriateness for your project.
Tip #3 • Aim for concise, clear, jargon-free language “…in most instances, lengthy rubrics probably can be reduced to succinct…more useful versions for classroom instruction. Such abbreviated rubrics can still capture the key evaluative criteria needed to judge students’ responses. Lengthy rubrics, in contrast, will gather dust” (Benjamin 23).
Tip #4 • Limit the number of criteria, but • Separate key criteria. • “Very clear” and “very organized” may be clear but not organized or vice versa.
Tip #5 • Use key, teachable criteria. Key Questions: What are my objectives? Are there other generalized objectives that should be included?
Tip #6 • Use concrete versus abstract and positives rather than negatives • Instead of “poorly organized” use “sharply focused thesis, topic sentences clearly connected to thesis, logical ordering of paragraphs, conclusion ends with clincher”. Key Question to ask yourself: Would student know what quality “looked like” by this description?
Tip #7 • Use measurable criteria. – “Includes two or more new ideas…” instead of “creative and imaginative”
Tip #8 • Aim for an even number of levels – Create continuum between least and most – Define poles and work inward – List skills and traits consistently across levels
Tip #9 • Include students in creating or adapting rubrics • Consider using “I” in the descriptors • I followed precisely—consistently—inconsistently— MLA documentation format. • I did not follow MLA documentation format.
Tip #10 • Provide models of the different performance levels.
The Assignment Sheet • Link the assignment sheet and the rubric. Use same language. • Include all non-negotiable items. – On time – Formatted correctly – Follows standard conventions… – Etc.
Rubrics formative assessment • Encourage students to “check progress” using the rubric. • Encourage / require self-assessment and/or peer assessment.
Steps in Developing a Rubric • Design backwards—rubric first; then product/performance. • Decide on the criteria for the product or performance to be assessed. • Write a definition or make a list of concrete descriptors—identifiable-- for each criterion. • Develop a continuum for describing the range of performance for each criterion. • Keep track of strengths and weaknesses of rubric as you use it to assess student work. • Revise accordingly. • Step back; ask yourself, “What didn’t I make clear instructionally? ” The weakness may not be the rubric.
A Good Rubric should: • address all relevant content and performance objectives • define standards and help students achieve them • provide criteria with which students can evaluate their own work • be easy to understand use • be applicable to a variety of tasks • provide all students with an opportunity to succeed at some level • be reliable, that is, yield consistent results even when administered by different scorers
Example of Good Rubric Group Evaluation Rubric
Example 2: Presentation Rubric
Example 3: Diploma Project Presentation
Example 4: Rubric for Final Year Project Report / Essay Assignment
Example 4: Rubric for Final Year Project Report / Essay Assignment continues. .
Example 4: Rubric for Final Year Project Report / Essay Assignment continues. .
Rubrics On Line • "Rubistar Rubric Generator" (http: //rubistar. 4 teachers. org/) • "Teacher Rubric Maker" (http: //www. teachnology. com/web_tools/rubrics/) • “Rubrician” (http: //www. rubrician. com/language. htm” • Rubrics for Web Lessons (http: //edweb. sdsu. edu/triton/july/rubrics/Rubrics_for_Web_Lessons. html ) • An Online Rubric Maker (http: //landmark-project. com/classweb/rubrics/)
References • • • Andrade, H. (2000). Using rubrics to promote thinking and learning. Alexandria, VA: ASCD. Asmus, E, (1999). Rubrics. Retrieved on May 29, 2007, from http: //www. music. miami. edu/assessment/rubrics. html Baggio, C. Designing rubrics: Revising instruction and improving performance. Retrieved on March 1, 2007, from http: //www. edutech. org. br. Baggio, C. (n. d. ). Tips for designing rubrics. Retrieved on May 29, 2007, from www. sdst. org/shs/library/powerpoint/rubrics. ppt Benjamin, A. (2000). An English teacher’s guide to performance tasks and rubrics. Larchmont: Eye on Education. Leavell, A. (n. d. ). Authentic assessment: Using rubrics to evaluate project-based learning. WEBLIBRARY. Matthews, J. (2000). Writing by the rules no easy task. Retrieved on October 25, 2000 from <http: //washingtonpost. com/wp-dyn/articles/A 63599 -2000 Oct 23. html> Simkins, M. (1999, August). Designing great rubrics. Technology and Learning. Wiggins, G. & Mc. Tighe, J. (1998). Tips for developing effective rubrics. Understanding by Design. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Mutiara kata…. “ Ukuran tubuhmu tidak penting. Ukuran otakmu cukup penting. Ukuran hatimu itulah yang terpenting” - BC Gorbes -
Thank you Wassalam. .
- Slides: 50