1. Post your rubric as an "Assignment":
![](https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-pUSRFKg9gAs/XLXX8_CgYSI/AAAAAAAAIWY/iGR4crPNLFgXhouFm615vfhnuCLyC12NACK4BGAYYCw/s200/Screen%2BShot%2B2019-04-16%2Bat%2B8.21.02%2BAM.png)
2. Make sure each student gets a copy:
![](https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-JGzbNzhf_ek/XLXX7gWf_0I/AAAAAAAAIWQ/DGQxf9S_1wke9w7k6Aj0F0dewh4SZyeQgCK4BGAYYCw/s400/Screen%2BShot%2B2019-04-16%2Bat%2B8.21.27%2BAM.png)
3. Assess!
Want a copy of this rubric? Click Here: bit.ly/1ptClassroom
Grade smarter, not harder!
This particular rubric was created in Google Sheets. It uses Checkboxes and Conditional Formatting to create one-click highlighting for easy grading and easy reading.If these features are not important to you, you can of course use Google Docs.
![Bitmoji Image](https://render.bitstrips.com/v2/cpanel/318efb71-ebc1-4ff6-ab21-9677f927389c-%s-v1.png?transparent=1&palette=1)
I used Sheets for this because when giving feedback to 150 students, I want to streamline things as much as possible. I save every second I can by reducing the number of clicks and reducing the number of times I move my hands between keyboard and mouse. If there is a piece of feedback I give commonly, I type it out somewhere else and have it ready to copy/paste.
The rubric style itself was created in the Single-Point Rubric format. If you're not familiar, check out that link as well as the original Your Rubric is a Hot Mess blog post, both by Cult of Pedagogy's Jennifer Gonzalez.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.