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Rubric
Submitted by Marianne Galyk

Form adapted using
criteria submitted by Patty
Knott (see note below)

Note
from Patty Knott
I often make entirely original rubrics, this one
is borrowed from many sources. I think some of this may have come
from Marvin Bartel. The important thing in designing rubrics is that
YOU believe what you are evaluating is important and you consider
what the students think is important. Rubrics are a collaboration
between student and teacher. A student needs to know what good or
excellent "looks like " as compared to an average. With each
rubric I also give reflection questions. I ask them to write about
the work of another student and really question them selves as to
why they respond to this work. They assign adjectives to the work --
they tell how they are "moved." I also ask with each
work "what do you want me to consider in evaluating what you
did?" Most often the answer is effort or experimenting. And
that is why composition and technique do not hold higher regard
from investigating and problem solving.
I offer the
"5" column so if a student can justify that he/she
went beyond presumed expectations, I will bump up in that
category. I always expect that a student will go
beyond in some way that I didn't anticipate.
I've been using rubrics
long before they became the thing to do. I never knew
any other way to evaluate art work. My numbers are qualified
beyond good and excellent, etc. They need to know
what good is. It's the only way rubrics work. I don't ever
just check off boxes, I make lots of comments.
My grading has become much easier since I initiated daily
objective logs. I make a weekly sheet for each student
to complete. They enter their objectives for the day at the
beginning of the period and reflect on progress at the end. I
read these each day and make brief comments. This is also a way
for the students to ask me questions when I don't get around
to see each one during the period. Since this takes care of
attendance, I just spend the time reviewing rather than taking
roll. It allows me to give individual prompts. I
have established it as routine, so it's not a big chore. The kids
expect it and it keeps them on task.
I think kids understand and want honest evaluations. They too
often underestimate what they have done, and, will admit
when they slack. Work with them to make the dialogue and
always understand that sometimes they deviate for a reason.
~ Patty Knott