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Rubrics: Using Performance Criteria to Improve Student Achievement. Types of Assessment Methods. Selected-response Require students to select a response from a provided list or supply a brief answer. Examples: multiple choice, true/false, matching, or essay tests. Constructed-response
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Rubrics: Using Performance Criteria to Improve Student Achievement
Types of Assessment Methods • Selected-response • Require students to select a response from a provided list or supply a brief answer. • Examples: multiple choice, true/false, matching, or essay tests. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Constructed-response • Require students to construct a tangible product or perform a demonstration to show what they know and can do. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Constructed-Response • Students must organize and use knowledge and skills to answer a question or complete a task, rather than recall and recognize. • Cannot be scored with an answer key or by machine. • Assessments require a performance criteria scoring tool. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Performance Criteria • Are guidelines to use to judge student responses, products, or performances. • Describe what criterion or dimension to look for in student work. • Used to judge constructed response assessments. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Explicitly defined criteria • A goal for creating performance criteria is to make an essentially subjective judgment process as clear, consistent, and defensible as possible. • An effective scoring tool to use are rubrics. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Rubrics • Scoring tools that define the critical criteria of the performance to be assessed. • Contain levels of achievement or performance. • Levels provide detailed explanation of the degree of mastery and a numerical score. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
When used for assessment rubrics are: • fair, • consistent, • practical, and • unbiased. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Benefits of Performance Criteria for Faculty • Consistency in Scoring • Clearly defined criteria communicate the important elements of quality. • Increase the consistency of judgments across teachers. • Improves Instruction • Assist in clarifying instructional goals and student learning outcomes. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Benefits of Performance Criteria for Students • Creates a shared vocabulary. • Develops understanding of the important dimensions of quality of performance. • Creates clear learning goals. • Removes mystery of expectations. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
What Rubrics are NOT • Checklists • Likert scales • Performance lists NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Two Types of Rubrics • Holistic: • Combines all performance criteria together to get single score or rating. • Analytical: • Divides a product or performance into essential traits or elements so they can each be judged separately. • Used when on going assessment is integrated with instruction and feedback is needed to improve teaching and learning. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
When to Use a Holistic Rubric • Judge a simple product or performance. • Get a quick snapshot. • Often scoring on one dimension. • Disadvantages: • No detailed analysis of strengths and weaknesses. • Do not provide detailed feedback to students. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
When to Use an Analytical Rubric • Criteria is broken down into critical elements, content/coverage, of performance. • Judging complex performances involving several elements. • Provides more feedback to students. • Scoring on multiple dimensions. • Disadvantages: • More time-consuming to create. • Need to take time for training if more than one instructor is using the rubric. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Analytical Rubric Learning Goals Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher sets significant, challenging, varied and appropriate learning goals. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Analytical rubrics, set a performance standard on each critical element. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
More on Critical Elements • The descriptors under each critical element are not meant as a checklist. • Content of a rubric defines what to look for in student performance. • Rubric content is similar to content standards. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Clarity and Detail • The more detail the better. • Teachers, students, and others should be able to interpret the statements and terms in the rubric the same way. • Use samples of student work to illustrate what is meant. • Use words that are specific and accurate. • Levels are defined with lots of descriptive detail. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Technical Quality • Rubrics must adequately measure the skills being assessed. • Consideration of fairness- • Will the rubric treat all students the same way? NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Determining the number of levels • Consider the nature of the performance and the purpose for scoring. • What is the range of qualitatively different degrees of understanding, proficiency, or quality of the product? • How many score points will distinguish quality? NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Suggested: An even number (4 or 6) of levels of performance on the scale. • When there is an odd number of levels, scores tend to move to the middle. • With an even number of levels, raters have to make a more precise judgment about a performance when its quality is not at the top or bottom of the scale. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Steps in Rubric Development • Develop the critical elements to be assessed. • Determine “traits” – important dimensions of performance. • Determine if rubric will be holistic or analytical. • Brainstorm: • critical elements. • Comments that relate to each critical element. • Indicate which comments relate to each element at the high, middle, and low levels. • Review comments and place into categories. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Continuously refine: • Take notes as rubric is used on critical elements that may be missing and scoring levels. • Keep an open mind. • Get feedback from students. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Collect samples of student work that illustrate the various critical elements and performance levels. • Samples can help to refine rubric. NCATE Orientation Fall 2007
Barbara Chesler Buckner Associate Provost for Assessment and Accreditation Coastal Carolina University 843-349-6441 bbuckner@coastal.edu NCATE Orientation Fall 2007