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The
word rubric derives from the Latin word for red.
It
was once used to signify the highlights of a legal decision as well as
the directions for conducting religious services,
found in the margins of liturgical booksboth written in red.

Essay
Rubric
Oral
Presentation/Public Speaking Rubric
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What
is a Rubric?

| 1.
A rubric is a set of criteria or expectations to assess learners'
performance. |
| 2.
Criteria are established to help distinguish between expert and novice
responses. |
| 3.
A rubric becomes a learning tool when it presents guidelines for students
to track. Thus rubrics bridge assessment and learning. |
| 4.
Application of rubrics to specific contexts help learners identify
personal strengths and weaknesses. |
| 5.
Learners feel the freedom to be imaginative, creative and constructive
within an exploratory learning environment. |
| 6.
Rubrics enable teachers to make valid and reliable inferences about
the learners version of reality. |
| 7.Rubrics
encourage learners' ownership of the 'product' of learning |
Useful links:
Why
use Rubrics
How
to create a rubric from scratch
Rubric
Banks - and
more rubric starters
Examples
of Rubrics
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Why do we use
rubrics?
The aim of
the criteria is to be engaging and effective to:
Offer constructive
feedback which enables learners to achieve agreed learning goals
Motivate
learners to construct their own version of reality.
Enable valid
evaluations of learners' 'product'.
Provide consistent
and reliable assessment of learning over time.

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