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Cally Black

3 Rubric Makers That Will Save You Time And Stress | Edudemic - 0 views

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    Rubrics can be an incredibly useful tool for your classroom. Aside from being one of those cool words that sounds a little weirder every time you say it, using a rubric can help your students understand the assignments in your classroom, and will make your grading process clearer, faster, and more objective and consistent. Online rubric makers can make rubric creation pretty simple, so we've collected a few sites that offers online rubric makers (some of them are free) that can help you out in your classroom. There are many sites out there that also offer shared rubrics from other users that you can use as well - quite a helpful tool if you're either in a pinch, or at a loss for where to start.
Sara Wilkie

Twitter Rubric - 2 views

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    "This rubric may be used for assessing use of Twitter for instructional assignments. "
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    Thanks for the rubric Sara, this is a great idea!
Sara Wilkie

BalancEdTech - Discussion Rubric - 0 views

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    discussion rubric
Cally Black

Assessment and Rubrics - 0 views

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    A collection of rubrics for assessing portfolios, cooperative learning, research process/ report, PowerPoint, oral presentation, web page, blog, wiki, and other social media projects.
Sara Wilkie

Diving Into Project-based Learning: Designing the Rubric |Philip Cummings - 0 views

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    "Perhaps the most difficult aspect of project-based learning for me was figuring out how I was going to assess it. I'm sure some teachers love assessing and marking student work, but honestly, I'm uncomfortable with most grading and scoring. I appreciate feedback and I don't mind giving feedback, but I hate reducing it to a letter, number, or score. To me, it undervalues the learning."
Sara Wilkie

Diving Into Project-based Learning: Our Need to Know |Philip Cummings - 0 views

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    "Once the students had selected a topic from our over-arching theme of civil/human rights, and I had a rubric, it was time for the real work to begin. We started our project-based learning by making a list on the board of things we know about the topic followed by a list of things we "need to know." Basically, we completed the K and W of our KWL chart (PDF)."
Sara Wilkie

Who do our students consider the audience? SmartBlogs - 0 views

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    We need to develop more learning opportunities where students constitute the actual evaluators for the work itself. Imagine if students, teachers and others evaluate and provide feedback to determine the effectiveness of a student's creation: Develop an 60-second speech to be shared with the student council and three advertising posters to be copied and placed around school to decrease bullying. Your work will be evaluated according to our rubric by the students in our class, outside professionals and me - as the teacher. These are the experiences that push learning beyond a one-way conversation between student and teacher. They demystify the assessment process and allow each student to be a creator and simultaneous evaluator, providing multiple experiences for students to recognize and apply the criteria for quality"
Cally Black

Infographic: My third Teacher alphabet - Teacher - 0 views

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    What do you need information on? Curriculum? Data? Rubrics? The third Teacher alphabet brings you quick links to popular content that you might find useful.
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