I am writing this article about rubrics for parents. Your child's first couple of years in school will probably be an exciting time of exploration and discovery. Then, along come the middle and high school years when assessment begins to rear its ugly head. Then that day comes when your child comes home all upset because she got a C on a paragraph her class had to write on the prompt "Stuff that makes me laugh." Suddenly, the assessment is staring you and your child in the face. Both of you wonder why her teacher gave her a C.
Now, let's understand something fundamental to assessment. Your teachers are not trying to humiliate or demean you. They are merely trying to determine your child's skill sets. We adults have endured performance reviews during the course of our careers. Those are other forms of assessment. Teachers, by and large, don't grade subjectively. They look at a set of criteria which they apply uniformly to every student's work. Those criteria are styled rubrics. So, let's dig in and find out how they work. As we look at the various components that can make up rubrics, I have included an authoritative source from one of the many education schools in the nation. Use these to learn more about a specific rubric component that interests you.
Fundamental Principles of Rubrics
Assessment Tool
Essentially, a rubric is a tool for evaluating and assessing work or performance. Like we use Google Maps or Waze