1 / 17

Open Ended Responses

Open Ended Responses. Two Column Notes. What are Open Ended Responses (OER)?. 3 Questions to answer based on reading 2 stories: Fiction Question Non-Fiction Question Crossover (Both Stories) Question Space 5 lines for the single story questions 8 lines for the crossover question.

Download Presentation

Open Ended Responses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Open Ended Responses Two Column Notes

  2. What are Open Ended Responses (OER)? • 3 Questions to answer based on reading 2 stories: • Fiction Question • Non-Fiction Question • Crossover (Both Stories) Question • Space • 5 lines for the single story questions • 8 lines for the crossover question

  3. RACE to the top! • R: RESTATE • The question in your own words. • A: ANSWER • Answer the question directly. • Answer the question in the first sentence • C: CITE EVIDENCE • Cite evidence to support your answer • Use only quotes that tie directly to the answer • E: EXTEND YOUR THINKING • Explain how the evidence proves your answer

  4. Text Support/Evidence- Answer must have: • DIRECT QUOTE is BEST • Preferred way to cite evidence • Must be a Full sentence • Summary/Paraphrase • Weaker

  5. How is an OER SCORED? • 0 = insufficient • 1 = partially sufficient • 2 = sufficient • 3 = exemplary • 0 & 1 = not passing • 2 & 3 = passing

  6. Score 0 INSUFFICIENT • Too general or vague • Incorrect based on the story. • Just a plot summary. • Leaving it blank. • Writing in a foreign language

  7. Score 1 PARTIALLY SUFFICIENT • Answer provided BUT you are missing one of remaining parts: • Have evidence but no explanation • Have explanation but no evidence OR • All three parts exist BUT… • Unclear connection between evidence and the explanation

  8. Score 2 SUFFICIENT • All four parts (RACE) found WITH… • Relevant evidence • Explanation of evidence is clear and specific

  9. Score 3 EXEMPLARY • all the characteristics of a 2 WITH… • Particularly thoughtful or insightful analysis and/or evidence • Explanation of evidence shows depth of understanding ORIGINAL WELL-THOUGHT OUT WELL-WRITTEN

  10. REVIEW • RACE: • Restate the question in your own words. • Answer the question. • Cite relevant evidence. • Explain how the evidence proves your answer. • SCORING: • 0 = insufficient • 1 = partially sufficient • 2 = sufficient • 3 = exemplary

  11. A GOOD THING!!! • The graders CANNOT grade you on grammar and sentence structure, BUT… • These things can effect how well they can read your answer.

  12. Applying the OERto REAL LIFE The Egg Analogy

  13. Imagine the Scoring as an… • Shell • Yolk • White Egg

  14. Comparing OER Scoring to an Egg • 0- Insufficient • These answers have no parts of the egg, or parts included are wrong, unclear, or not specific. The reader says, “No Way!” No Egg Parts

  15. Comparing OER Scoring to an Egg • 1- Partially Sufficient • These answers may have only one or two parts of the egg. All of the parts are not included and/or parts are unclear, incomplete. The reader says, “Huh?” Broken Egg

  16. Comparing OER Scoring to an Egg • 2- Sufficient • All three parts of the egg are evident and all parts are reasonable. The reader says, “Okay.” Whole Egg

  17. Comparing OER Scoring to an Egg • 3- Exemplary • All three parts of the egg are evident, thoughtful, insightful, and offer strong support. These answers may offer a unique perspective. The reader says, “Wow!” Decorative Egg

More Related