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Creating Rubrics for Assessment of General Education Mathematics. Dick Jardine SUNY General Education Assessment Conference Syracuse, NY April 27, 2005 rjardine@keene.edu. Overview. The language of rubrics Some examples Make your own rubric! What to do with the results.
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Creating Rubrics for Assessment of General Education Mathematics Dick Jardine SUNY General Education Assessment Conference Syracuse, NY April 27, 2005 rjardine@keene.edu
Overview • The language of rubrics • Some examples • Make your own rubric! • What to do with the results
What is a rubric? • A rubric is a scoring device designed to assist in the process of communicating expectations and assessing performance • Based on a range of criteria rather than a single numerical score • A working guide for both students and faculty • Non-traditional, “authentic” assessment instrument
Analytic and Holistic Rubrics Holistic: • Assesses the whole work • One score for the entire product Analytic: • Identify and assess components of the task • A score for each component • Provide more detail about standards
Example holistic rubric Student will conduct a hypothesis test 4 Uses appropriate test with correct with correct interpretation. Identifies correct null and alternative hypothesis. Uses correct test statistic. Obtains correct p-value and correctly interprets that result in terms of the null hypothesis and the context with clear exposition. 3 Provides most of level 4 but with unclear/incorrect interpretation 2 Uses incorrect test but remaining work follows from error 1 Uses incorrect test and remaining work does not follow 0 Little or no work of value
Analytic and Holistic Rubrics Holistic: • Assesses the whole work • One score for the entire product Analytic: • Identify and assess components • A score for each component • Provide more detail about standards
Possible terms for scoring levels • Needs Improvement...Satisfactory...Good…Exemplary • Beginning...Developing...Accomplished…Exemplary • Needs work...Good…Excellent • Novice...Apprentice...Proficient…Distinguished • Numeric scale ranging from 0 to n
Course-embedded assessment(University of Northern Colorado) • Align course objectives with Gen Ed outcomes • Identify course objectives and student outcomes • Explain tasks to measure each objective/outcome • Explain performance criteria to evaluate each objective (what constitutes meeting expectations)
Task: (Test question) How long will it take for $8600 to grow to $31,300 at an interest rate of 5.5% if the interest is compounded continuously? Area 1 : The student will demonstrate proficiency in the use of mathematics and/or statistics to structure their understanding of and investigate questions in the world around them Exceeds expectations Meets expectations Does not meet expectations
4 – Thorough Understanding • Demonstrates a thorough understanding of the concepts/content • Demonstrates mastery of the strategies and skills • Solves new problems by creative and appropriate use of knowledge/skills • 3 – Good understanding • Demonstrates a satisfactory understanding • Carries out skills and strategies with few minor errors • Applies prior knowledge when prompted • 2 – Satisfactory understanding • Demonstrates partial understanding of most important concepts • Carries out skills and strategies with minor errors • Makes progress toward the solving of new problems • 1 – Needs improvement • Demonstrates weak understanding of concepts/content • Carries out skills and strategies with significant critical errors Performance Assessment Scoring Rubric
Developing your own rubrics • With a colleague: • Determine the learning objective to be assessed. • List the criteria to be evaluated. • Describe degrees of quality (in a matrix), starting with the best and worst quality and then filling in the middle. • Share the rubric with students before they complete the assignment so students understand the criteria for evaluation. • With a colleague: • Use the rubric to evaluate the students’ work to determine if they have met the learning objective. • Adjust rubric as needed for next assessment
Some limitations of rubrics • Time it takes to develop quality rubrics • Reduction of “knowledge rich” activities to selected easily observable behaviors • Achieving consensus to “norm” the rubric standards
Some advantages of rubrics • Faculty provide focus, emphasis, and attention to details for students • Students have explicit details regarding teacher expectations • Tool for student development • Grading more efficient and effective
What to do with the results? • Improve student learning • Improve curriculum and instruction • Improve assessment process • How to use the numbers?
Summary and conclusion • Creating rubrics should be a collaborative process • Communicate the standards to students • Calibrating the scoring requires significant discussion • Improve learning with the results • http://www.maa.org/saum email:rjardine@keene.edu