Electronic Learning:
Online Rubrics in a Snap
By Erin Earnst
Assessment rubrics, by setting benchmarks for student learning
and achievement, are effective tools for evaluating a wide
variety of student learning activities. And beyond providing
teachers with helpful guidelines for student assessment,
rubrics also improve learning because students can understand
the evaluation criteria and take them into account as they
complete their work.
Creating a good rubric on paper can be time-consuming,
but Web-based rubrics are comprehensive and easy to use.
There is a plethora of Web sites for rubrics, so teachers
at all levels of tech experience can create custom rubrics
in minutes.
One such Web site is RubiStar (http://rubistar.4teachers.org),
a free site that provides generic rubrics in a format that
can be easily customized. See the box below on how to create
a rubric template from the site. For more information on
rubrics, visit these other Web sites:
Look out for upcoming issues of Instructor, where
a future Electronic Learning column will review how to create
grade books using Excel.
Erin
Earnst, a former fourth-grade teacher, works for Tom Snyder
Productions. This article was originally
published in the March 2003 issue of Instructor.
Create
an Oral Presentation Rubric
Follow these steps to create a test rubric using RubiStar.
An example of a rubric built using these steps can be viewed
at http://rubistar.4teachers.org/view_rubric.php3?id=564401
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- Go to http://rubistar.4teachers.org
and click on "Oral Projects" then click on "Oral Presentation."
- Scroll down and click in the Teacher Name text box and
type your name. Click in the Project Name text box and
type "Demo." Type your three-digit area code next to Area
Phone Code. (Note: Since RubiStar is a free Web site,
supported by the U.S. Department of Education, it uses
the area code to report where its users live. This is
the only data collected by the site.)
- Click the "Select a Rating Scale" menu and choose "Descriptive
Rating Scale". The top row of the rubric will fill in
automatically with the four levels of the rating scale.
To edit the scale, highlight the word you'd like to change
and type in your own description.
- Click the "Select Category" pull-down menu and select
"Preparedness." The text boxes to the right will automatically
fill in with content related to the category. Repeat this
process to select three additional categories. If you'd
like to customize any of the text, simply click in the
box and make the desired changes.
- To complete your test rubric, scroll down to the bottom
of the page and click "Make a Printable Rubric." When
creating your own rubric, select "Make and Save Printable
Rubric" when you are finished. You will be able to save
your rubric online, create custom categories, and access
your rubric from any computer connected to the Internet!
You can also cut and paste the rubric to a Microsoft Word
file to save on your hard drive.