Friday, July 30, 2010

Paper Grading Rubric

Writing is an art and sometimes difficult to grade. At the same time, writing is also a craft. This is particularly true in the field of history, where the distinction between "good" and "bad" history can be reasonably assessed. In this course, I use a grading rubric for your writing assignments. See chart below.
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Paper Grading Rubric:

Grading Criteria:

Excellent Paper A/A-

Grading Criteria:

Good B+/B/B-

Grading Criteria:

Fair C+/C/C-

Grading Criteria:

Poor D+/D-/F

Thesis

Clear; stated up front; thoughtful; strong topic paragraph or sentence

Slightly unclear; no strong introduction

Unclear thesis and introduction

No thesis or introduction

Structure

Strong transitions between ideas; clear references to argument; clear arc (beginning/ middle/end)

Generally clear, but weak transitions; vague references to thesis

Somewhat coherent but weak transitions; vague or no reference to thesis

Lack of structure or coherence

Analysis

Demonstrates an understanding of the readings; connects evidence with argument

Reference to but not a clear understanding of readings; vague connection between evidence and argument

Very weak understanding of readings; little connection between evidence and argument

Unable to demonstrate analysis or understanding of sources

Evidence

Clearly highlighted; multiple examples; use of variable sources

Ambiguous use of sources; one-dimensional use

Unclear and/or little use of sources

Little or no use of evidence

Mechanics

No typos, fragments, or run-on sentences; no awkward constructions; no misuse of citations

Minor typos and grammatical errors; run-on sentences

Frequent typos, grammatical, and punctuation errors; frequent run-on sentences

Poorly written with frequent errors


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