Rubric for assessment of the text
Revision as of 13:52, 11 April 2013 by Jana Dlouha (talk | contribs)
Used for Case study assessment in 2010/2011 course
Criteria/levels of fulfillment | max points: 10 | max points: 5 | points: 0 | Assessment | |
Content | quality of resources &well-founded argumentation: text shows knowledge, provides real(measurable) information; details go beyond the obvious or predictable; arguments are based on reliable resources found specifically for research; theories or statistical data presented | insufficient information; details are more or less predictable; sometimes reliable but some of the argument is biased | information is limited,repeated, no specific or original details; the author is just trying to sell an idea or opinion | ||
Context | wide context & core of the problem identified: problems understood in their inter-relationships, interlinked with similar themes, specific information fits into the whole picture; hidden causes of described phenomena are understood | narrow context: problems not interrelated, random facts presented; specific information out of context | |||
Practical relevance | combines general, theoretical knowledge and global features with practical consequences and local context: shows concrete examples and has practical conclusions | theoretical/practical knowledge and global/local perspective is not sufficiently balanced | from either a purely global or the prevailing local perspective; examples from practice versus generalizations do not work; no practical relevance | ||
Focus | strong conclusions: values behind the topic are clear; main problem identified and discussed (analyzed); narrowing of topics -> channeled towards practical conclusions(at the end of the writing process) | several topics with +- clear priorities; text is sometimes focused on minor problems and neglects importantones | value orientation not certain; numerous topics with noclear priority; weak or totally impractical conclusions | ||
Clarity | logical structure of the text: ideas are clear, (every) paragraph declares a separate point; detail adds to the main idea, elements are in the right place | ideas & focus of (every)paragraph need to be more specific; details need to be used in proper context(of other elements and main idea) | ideas unclear, seem scrambled, jumbled, and disconnected; structure not logical; details do not fit with the main idea | ||
Critical approach | balanced text: opposing views presented | one-sided ideology promoted | |||
Commitment | ethics (writing) &length (text): writing process basedon ethical values; time spent on writing above average | ethical principles in writing not satisfactorily respected & time or attention paid to the writing not sufficient | |||
Individual input & risk-taking | initiative in researching topic: originality of the theme, independent work with resources | some new perspectives, but some are replicated, insufficient initiative | description of the problem does not bring any new perspectives; conclusions not original; insufficient resources | ||
Formal features | respecting academic genre: proper length of paragraphs, sufficient titles and subtitles, sources properly cited in the text and in the list of references – citation format respected | no clear genre and structure, citation +/- OK | mixed genre, titles and subtitles insufficient, sources not properly cited in the text, citation format not correct | ||
Reaction on the peer review | reviewer’s comments respected fully – or left out those which are not relevant – in which case an explanation is provided in the discussion | reviewer’s comments not respected | |||
Total (points) | max 100 |
Author: Jana Dlouhá. This article was published under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. How to cite the article: Jana Dlouhá. (21. 11. 2024). Rubric for assessment of the text. VCSEWiki. Retrieved 10:32 21. 11. 2024) from: <https://vcsewiki.czp.cuni.cz/w/index.php?title=Rubric_for_assessment_of_the_text&oldid=3276>. |