Friday, 7 December 2012

Argumentative Essay Evaluation

My evaluation of The Faceless Teacher by Dennis Gardner


Argumentative Essay Rubric




4
3
2
1
Introduction
The introductory
paragraph has a
strong hook or
attention grabber
that is appropriate
for the audience. The position statement (thesis)
provides a clear,
strong statement of
the author's position
on the topic.
The introductory
paragraph has a
hook or attention
grabber, but it is
weak, rambling or
inappropriate for the
audience. The
position statement
(thesis) provides a
clear, strong
statement of the
author's position on
the topic.
The author has an
interesting
introductory
paragraph but the
connection to the
topic is not always
clear. The position
statement (thesis) of
the author's position
on the topic is weak.
The introductory
paragraph is not
interesting AND is
not relevant to the
topic. The position
statement (thesis) is
missing or not clear.
Support for Position
Includes 2 or more
pieces of evidence
that support the
position statement
and all are specific,
relevant and show
how each piece of
evidence supports
the author's position.
Includes 1 to 2
pieces of evidence
that support the
position statement
and most are
specific, relevant and
show how each
piece of evidence
supports the author's
position
Includes 1 piece of
evidence that
supports the position
statement and is
relevant to show
how that piece of
evidence supports
the author's position.
Includes 1 or fewer
pieces of evidence
that is NOT relevant
AND/OR not
explained.
Refutation
Opposing argument
is identified and
clear. Refutation is
very clear and
concise in refuting
opponent's point of view.
Opposing argument
is identified and
clear. Refutation is
moderately clear and
concise in refuting
opponent's point of view.
Opposing argument
is identified, but
unclear. Refutation is weak and general in refuting opponent's
point of view.
Refutation is not
recognizable or
non-existent.
Sequencing
Arguments and
support are provided
in a logical order that makes it easy and interesting to follow the author's train of thought.
support are provided
in a fairly logical
order that makes it
reasonably easy to
follow the author's
train of thought.
A few of the support
details or arguments
are not in an
expected or logical
order, distracting the reader and making the essay seem a little confusing.
Many of the support
details or arguments
are not in an
expected or logical
order, distracting the reader and making the essay seem very confusing.
Conclusion
The conclusion is
strong and leaves
the reader solidly
understanding the
writer's position.
Effective
restatement of the
position statement
begins the closing
paragraph.
The conclusion is
recognizable. The
author's position is
restated within the
first two sentences
of the closing
paragraph.
The author's position
is restated within the closing paragraph, but not near the beginning.
There is no
conclusion - the
paper just ends.
Voice
The author seems to
be writing from
knowledge or
experience. The
author has taken the
ideas and made
them "his own."
The author seems to
be drawing on
knowledge or
experience, but
there is some lack of
ownership of the
topic.
The author relates
some of his own
knowledge or
experience, but it
adds nothing to the
discussion of the
topic.
The author has not
tried to transform
the information in a
personal way. The
ideas and the way
they are expressed
seem to belong to
someone else.
Grammar, Mechanics and Spelling
The author makes
no errors in grammar
or spelling that
distract the reader
from the content.
The author makes
1-2 errors in
grammar or spelling
that distract the
reader from the
content.
The author makes
3-4 errors in
grammar or spelling
that distract the
reader from the
content.
The author makes
more than 4 errors in
grammar or spelling
that distract the
reader from the
content.



Introduction: 4
Support for Position: 4
Refutation: 3
Sequencing: 4
Conclusion: 4
Voice: 4
Grammar, Mechanics and Spelling: 4
Total: 27/28

2 comments:

  1. I must say, this rubric is very detailed. It truly highlights all the important areas which teachers should focus on in the argumentative essay, simultaneously, restricting too much subjectivity. Another job well done Jeanne. KEEP IT UP!!!

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