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Title: Effective grading and teaching through the use of rubrics


1
Effective grading (and teaching) through the use
of rubrics use of rubrics for assessment
  • Sarah Murnen
  • Kenyon College

2
Personal Background
  • Although a psychologist, no particular background
    in this topic
  • As Kenyons Assessment Coordinator from
    2002-2006 I learned that
  • Some faculty resent the assessment process and
    see it as extra burden
  • Departments with faculty who feel burdened by
    assessment dont get much out of it
  • Departments that find a way to integrate
    assessment with what they already do benefit from
    the process they discuss what students are
    learning and change their teaching methods,
    assignments, and sometimes their entire curricula
    to help students learn

3
Benefits of Ohio-5 Project
  • To help improve student learning (and faculty
    teaching) by encouraging the use of rubrics
  • (Many other benefits to the use of rubrics)
  • To specifically encourage a focus on creativity
    and critical thinking, important aspects of a
    liberal education
  • To use rubrics for assessing critical thinking
    and creativity
  • To show faculty how all of the work they put into
    grading can be used for assessment purposes

4
Background Information
  • Presentation by Dr. Douglas Eder on Primary
    Trait Analysis
  • Presentation by Barbara Walvoord on the use of
    rubrics for effective grading
  • Walvoord, B. E., P Anderson, J. A. (1998).
    Effective Grading A tool for learning and
    assessment. Jossey-Bass San Francisco, CA.
  • Stevens Levi (2005). Introduction to rubrics
    An assessment tool to save grading time, convey
    effective feedback, and promote student learning.
    Stylus Publishing Sterling, Virginia.

5
Our primary concern is student learning
  • Good practice in undergraduate education
    (Walvoord, 1998, p. 15)
  • Encourages student-faculty contact
  • Encourages cooperation among students
  • Encourages active learning
  • Gives prompt feedback
  • Emphasizes the time that students devote to the
    task
  • Communicates high expectations
  • Respects diverse talents and ways of learning

6
Walvoord asks (1998, p. 15)
  • How many of these principles of good practice in
    some way involve the grading system in your
    class, the tests and assignments on which that
    system is based, and your ways of communicating
    with students about their work and their grades?

7
Walvoords Argument for Establishing Clear
Criteria and Standards for Grading
  • Saves time in grading process
  • Allows you to make the process consistent and
    fair
  • Helps you explain to students what you expect
  • Shows you what to teach
  • Identifies essential relationship between
    discipline information and processes
  • Help students evaluate their own and each others
    work
  • Saves you from having to explain your criteria to
    students after they have handed in their work, as
    a way of justifying the grades they are
    contesting
  • Helps student peers give each other constructive
    feedback on plans and drafts
  • Helps team teachers or teaching assistants grade
    student papers consistently
  • Helps teachers of sequenced courses communicate
    with each other about standards and criteria
  • Form the basis for departmental or institutional
    assessment

8
How to Establish Clear Criteria Primary Trait
Analysis
  • Developed to score essays on the National
    Assessment of Educational Progress by Lloyd-Jones
    in1977
  • Creates a scoring rubric that can be used to
    assess any student performance
  • Is assignment specific
  • Can be used for grading
  • For this project, we will develop rubrics using
    PTA to measure the critical thinking and
    creativity we are encouraging in our students

9
Why take the time to do PTA for grading?
  • Makes grading more consistent and fair
  • Saves time in the grading process once the rubric
    is developed
  • Can diagnose students strengths and weaknesses
    very specifically in order to teach more
    effectively
  • Can track changes in student performance

10
Process of PTA (Eder)
  • Identify the primary traits essential or
    central components of the discipline to be
    learned by the student
  • Build a scale for scoring the students
    performance on the trait
  • Evaluate the students performance against those
    criteria

11
Key Stages in Constructing a Rubric (Stevens
Levi)
  • Reflecting -
  • What do we want from our students?
  • Why did we create the assignment?
  • What happened the last time we used the
    assignment?
  • What are our expectations for the assignment?
  • Listing Focus on particular details of the
    assignment and what specific learning objectives
    we hope to see completed (Sometimes helps to
    imagine the best and the worst performance on the
    assignment)
  • Grouping and Labeling the goals together -
    Organize the results of our reflections in Stages
    1 and 2, grouping similar expectations together
    in what will probably become the dimensions of
    the rubric
  • Application Transfer groupings to a rubric grid

12
Example Research Article Critique
  • Reflecting -
  • Want students to learn to be critical evaluators
    of psychological research
  • The research article critique should start them
    thinking critically, will follow up with class
    discussion on each critique, and use multiple
    critiques throughout the semester to help develop
    their skills
  • I expect students will move from description to
    analysis
  • Listing
  • I have seen students move through Blooms
    taxonomy in a semester using this assignment
    Most can show knowledge and comprehension at
    the beginning of the course, move to
    application, analysis, synthesis, and
    evaluation (hopefully). I want to try to
    capture this process.
  • Grouping and Labeling the goals together
  • see the questions that follow
  • Application Transfer groupings to a rubric grid
  • See the rubric that follows

13
Research Article Critique Assignment
  • For each article analysis you are to answer the
    following questions
  • What is the primary question posed by the study?
  • Is there a hypothesis stated? If so, what is it?
  • What is the theoretical explanation for the
    proposed hypothesis?
  • Briefly describe the way the independent and
    dependent variable(s) were manipulated or
    measured
  • How do the results of the study affect the
    originally posed hypothesis (or purpose of
    study)?
  • Two strengths of the study?
  • Two weaknesses of the study?
  • What is a logical extension of the study?
    Briefly describe a study you could conduct to
    extend the research

14
Sample Rubric Designed for AssessmentACC
Accomplished, AVG average, DEV developing,
BEG beginning
15
Rubric Used for Grading weight each component
16
Describing the level of performance on the rubric
  • Anywhere from 2 to 5 levels of performance on
    each trait
  • Terms used to describe level of performance might
    be positive and active to encourage motivation in
    students (suggestions from Stevens Levi)
  • Mastery, partial mastery, progressing, emerging
  • high level, middle level, beginning level
  • Sophisticated, competent, partly competent, not
    yet competent
  • Exemplary, proficient, marginal, unacceptable
  • Advanced, intermediate high, intermediate, novice
  • Distinguished, proficient, intermediate, novice
  • Accomplished, average, developing, beginning

17
Using Rubrics for Assessment
  • We all need to attend to the issue of assessment,
    and Walvoord argues that we can make use of what
    we already do in the grading process

18
American Association for Higher Educations
Principles of Good Practice for Assessing
Student Learning
  • Answer questions that people care about
  • Lead directly to improvement in teaching and
    learning
  • Be embedded in the context of learning
  • Take place repeatedly over time

19
The rubrics we use for grading can be used for
assessment
  • If we as faculty do not make our learning goals,
    tests, criteria, and standards explicit and
    understandable to legislatures, boards,
    accrediting agencies, and other audiences in ways
    that meet their needs and concerns, we face the
    very real possibility that some of the control we
    currently exercise in the classrooms will be
    taken away from us. We must deal with
    assessment, but we need not construct a parallel
    assessment structure that ignores the assessment
    we already conduct. (Walvoord, 1998, p. 5).

20
How to turn this into assessment
  • Paper 1 Paper 2 Paper 3 Total
  • Prof A
  • Creative1 4 1 2 7
  • Creative2 4 1 2 7
  • Critical1 3 1 3 7
  • Critical2 2 1 3 6
  • Prof B
  • Creative1 3 2 2 7
  • Creative2 4 1 3 8
  • Critical1 3 1 3 7
  • Critical2 2 1 3 6
  • Prof C
  • Creative1 4 1 2 7
  • Creative2 3 2 3 8
  • Critical1 2 2 3 7
  • Critical2 2 1 3 6

21
How have faculty been influenced by this process?
  • I was able to clarify my expectations for the
    course by articulating the purpose behind each
    graded exercise. This helped dramatically in
    easing anxieties about performance and final
    grades. Students seemed to appreciate
    understanding the logic behind the assignments
    and seeing that each focused on building and
    assessing a particular skill, rather than merely
    providing me with another grade.
  • Best of all, Im looking forward to sharing the
    process of developing PTA-based rubrics with my
    students. Specifically, students will work in
    groups to identify their own PTA-based critical
    thinking rubrics before they embark on writing a
    particular essay. I can hardly think of a better
    way to develop the students meta-cognition.,
    i.e., how they think about their own thinking!
  • Yes, weve been disappointed with some aspects
    of student performance (for example synthetic
    ability) and using the rubric has helped us
    communicate better with students, and were
    thinking about ways to improve courses to help
    teach the skills needed to succeed on this senior
    exercise objective.
  • I have learned a great deal, and I think that my
    teaching has been positively influenced by this
    important work. I can also say that my research
    and scholarship have been impacted by these foci,
    as well.

22
Go to Website for Rubric Samples
  • http//www.wooster.edu/teagle/default.html
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