Rubrics

Rubrics help instructors grade consistently and quickly, and they provide students with specific feedback on strengths and weaknesses. Rubrics, when well-aligned, reinforce learning objectives. All instructors – all humans – have biases, and rubrics can mitigate against bias since they “aim to minimize differences among readers” (Bean, 2011). They can be tricky, however, as it’s easy to make an overly complicated rubric that neither saves you time nor provides scores that make sense to instructors or students.

You may wish to invite students to help you create rubrics, generating student engagement with assignment objectives. It may be helpful to share samples of successful completed assignments as you and your students craft criteria and language for learning goals.

Rubric Cautions

Rubrics do not wholly erase bias, and they may mask teacher subjectivity and imply more precision in evaluation than is typically realistic (Broad, 2003). Furthermore, rubrics are often too precise, detailed and complicated, resulting in too much work for instructors, feedback that students can’t digest, or final scores that feel off when compared to holistic judgment. Be wary of overly long rubrics.

Creating Rubrics

You can create rubrics using whatever point scale you choose as part of your strategy to demonstrate the relative weight of a particular assignment. Creating rubrics through Canvas [link] makes for fast evaluation and saves time because you can reuse Canvas rubrics you have created in other courses. For more information, check out this video [link].

Bean (2011) outlines four types of rubrics (which can be mixed and matched):

  • Analytic: assigns separate scores for each criteria or learning objective and can weigh some criteria more heavily than others.
  • Holistic: views the paper as a whole to determine objectives and clarity.
  • Task-Specific: “designed to fit an individual assignment or genre.”
    Generic: follows a “one-size-fits-all design, aimed for use across a variety of writing tasks” (p. 256).

09.22.22 CK

 


For more information or help, please email the Office for Faculty Excellence or make an appointment with a consultant.

Creative Commons License
Teaching Resources by Montclair State University Office for Faculty Excellence is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Third-party content is not covered under the Creative Commons license and may be subject to additional intellectual property notices, information, or restrictions. You are solely responsible for obtaining permission to use third party content or determining whether your use is fair use and for responding to any claims that may arise.

Creative Commons CC BY-NC-4.0