In the past, rubrics served 1 main purpose: to standardize and make grading criteria transparent. Going forward, they will serve another purpose: seamless assessment of course outcomes.
Outcomes will be linked to the criteria rows of an assignment / discussion rubric by CIC. If instructors use the rubric to grade, the outcomes will be assessed automatically.
There are three important considerations that need to be made when attaching rubrics to assessments that will be used to assess a course outcome:
For example:
Course Outcome: “Identify the physiological responses and signs that are contraindications for starting or indications for terminating exercise testing or sessions.”
Existing rubric criteria:
These criteria are vague and irrelevant to the outcome. In cases like this, CIC strongly recommends creating a new rubric that aligns with the outcome(s).
New aligned rubric criteria:
This helps ensure that the achievement of the outcome is effectively and accurately measured.
When writing rubric criteria that aligns with a course outcome:
Analytic
Two-dimensional rubrics with levels of achievement as columns and assessment criteria as rows. Allows you to assess participants' achievements based on multiple criteria using a single rubric. You can assign different weights (value) to different criteria and include an overall achievement by totaling the criteria. With analytic rubrics, levels of achievement display in columns and your assessment criteria display in rows. Analytic rubrics may use a points, custom points, or text only scoring method. Points and custom points analytic rubrics may use both text and points to assess performance; with custom points, each row (criterion) may be worth a different number of points.
Points: This scoring method is only available to analytic rubrics. Performance levels are indicated by points. For example, three performance levels for a rubric can be Poor (0 points), Good (75 points), and Excellent (125 points).
Custom Points: This scoring method is only available to analytic rubrics. The Custom Points scoring method is similar to the Points scoring method, but you can customize the points given for each criterion. For example, if performance levels are Poor, Good, and Excellent, then the criterion Spelling and Grammar can be worth 0 points, 10 points, and 20 points for each level, and the criterion Expression can be worth 0 points, 30 points, and 60 points, making it worth three times the points of Spelling and Grammar.
Holistic
Single criterion rubrics (one-dimensional) used to assess learners' overall achievement on an activity or item based on predefined achievement levels. Holistic rubrics may use a percentage or text only scoring method. Scoring by percentage is only available to holistic rubrics. A holistic rubric using Percentages can be automatically assessed based on the score of its associated item, for example, a Grade item.
The Curriculum & Instruction Center has created a collection of analytic rubric templates. These rubrics can be used as is and entered into the LMS, or they can be used as a starting point and modified for specific course/program use.
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