Designing Standards-based Rubrics KY Writing Project Conference September 2015 1...

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Our Targets

• I can design a quality rubric congruent to expectations of grade level standards.

• I have a fundamental understanding of how rubric development and use supports the student growth goal-setting process.

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Rubric Design: A Recursive Process

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My example: From Enduring Skill to Grade Level Standards to Draft Rubric

Enduring Skill for Reading:Read and comprehend text at the high end of grade-level complexity.

Note: You may

choose more than

one enduring skill.

GL Standards Connections: RF 3.4a RI 3.1 RF 3.4c RI 3.2

My example: from Enduring Skill

Read and comprehend text at the high end of grade-level complexity.

RF 3.4a Read grade-level text with purpose and understanding.RF 3.4c Use context to confirm or self-correct word recognition and understanding, rereading as necessaryRI 3.1 Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the text as the basis for the answersRI 3.2 Determine the main idea of a text; recount the key details and explain how they support the main idea

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to Grade Level Standards

Below grade CLUES

Read & comprehend below GL text

Below GL text

with prompting & support

“ “

Retell details w/o explaining how they

support the main idea

Above Grade CLUES

Independently read & comprehend above GL text.

.. in above GL text

.. and explain inferences... and summarize text

.. and explain multiple main ideas of a text

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Proficiency on grade level

Read & understand GL text.

Read w/purpose.

Use context for word recognition, to understand text.

Reread to comprehend.

Refer explicitly to text to answer questions.

Determine main idea.

Recount key ideas & details; explain how they support main idea.

INDEPENDENTLY

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Activity: You Try It!from Enduring Skill to Draft Rubric

Enduring Skill from Speaking & Listening Anchor Standard 1:

Prepare for and participate effectively in collaborative conversations.

GL Standards Connections: SpL 1

You will select a grade

level to work with for your draft

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from Enduring Skill to Draft Rubric

• Study the related grade-level standard(s) to understand what students must know and be able to do in order to demonstrate proficiency.

• Look for clues in the corresponding standards for previous and next grades.

On chart paper, make 3 columns- • List in the center column what students should know and

be able to do in order to demonstrate proficiency at the intended level of rigor in the standard.

• List the expectations for the previous grades and the next grades

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Below grades CLUES

Read & comprehend below GL text

Below GL text

with prompting & support

“ “

Retell details w/o explaining how they

support the main idea

Above Grades CLUES

Independently read & comprehend above GL text.

.. in above GL text

.. and explain inferences... and summarize text

.. and explain multiple main ideas of a text

Proficiency on grade level

INDEPENDENTLY - Read & understand GL text.Read w/purpose.Use context for word recognition, to understand text.Reread to comprehend.Refer explicitly to text to answer questions.Determine main idea.Recount key ideas & details; explain how they support main idea.

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from Enduring Skill to Draft Rubric

• Identify the important criteria to be included in the rubric in order to meet the expectations of the standard(s).

• Don’t leave out any key criteria even if it is hard to describe.

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Proficiency on grade level

INDEPENDENTLY - Read & understand GL text.Read w/purpose.Use context for word recognition, to understand text.Reread to comprehend.Refer explicitly to text to answer questions.Determine main idea.Recount key ideas & details; explain how they support main idea.

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from Enduring Skill to Draft Rubric

On the Draft Rubric Template:

• Add the criteria you identified. • Use your list to describe PROFICIENCY for

each of the identified criteria.• Name the performance levels.

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from Enduring Skill to Draft Rubric Fill in other performance levels ensuring parallel and concise languageConsider: • Clues from previous & next grades’ expectations• What the standards assumes students already knowConsider language that: • Represents a continuum of learning• Scaffolds learning • Represents less than quality• Defines beyond proficiency

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Next you would -

• Test your rubric with student work• Continue to refine your rubric

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Engaging Students

• Students rewrite rubrics in student-friendly language• Students use models to identify criteria for quality• Students analyze poor models using the rubric

and identify how to improve• Students develop rubrics• Students use rubrics to provide peer feedback

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Rubrics and Student Growth Goal-Setting

• An analytic rubric can help teachers combine multiple sources of data to– determine a baseline score for goal-setting– determine if students met the goal at the end of

the course, and – formatively assess, provide feedback, and adjust

instruction along the way

Resources • Jay McTighe’s Lumibook on PD360, Assessing What

Matters Most (2013) (chapter 6)• Stiggins, Arter, Chappuis & Chappuis, Classroom

Assessment for Student Learning: Doing it Right – Using it Well (2006) (chapter 7)

• Brookhart, Susan (2013) How to Create and Use Rubrics for Formative Assessment and Grading

• Andrade, Heidi G. Using Rubrics to Promote Thinking and Learning(Feb 2000)

• Educational Testing Service, Creating & Recognizing Quality Rubrics CD (2006)

• Analytic Rubrics, DePaul University Teaching Commons19

Targets & Take-a-ways

• I can design a quality rubric congruent to expectations of grade level standards.

• I have a fundamental understanding of how rubric development and use supports the student growth goal-setting process.

Please Complete Your Evaluation

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