Synopsis
 By Licda. Guiselle Weelkly
Designing Scoring Rubrics for Your Classroom
are a scoring scale consisting of a set of criteria that  describe what expectations are being assessed/evaluated and descriptions  of levels of quality used to evaluate students work or to guide  students to desired performance levels.
Designing Scoring Rubrics for Your Classroom
There are two types of rubrics:
- Holistic Rubric requires the teacher to score the overall process or product as a whole without judging the component parts separately. This type of rubric is probably more appropiate when performance tasks requires students to create some sort of response and where there is no definitive correct answer. It is also a quicker scoring process than the use of analytic rubrics.
 
2.  Analytic Rubric    is when the teacher scores separately, individual parts of the product or performance first,  then sums the individual scores to obtain a total score.  Usually it is used when there may be one or two acceptable responses and creativity is not an essential feature of the student's  responses.  
The degree of feedback offered to students-and teachers- is significant when taking into account the analytic rubric.
Let's   take our students, step by step,  they will be glad for the HELP.
Five Reasons Why Analytical Rubrics Are Helpful
1. Differentiated Instruction
As in the example above, the rubric can serve as diagnostic and  formative assessment to enable the teacher to differentiate instruction.  Charting these assessments on whole class recording matrices can help  the teacher group students for efficient instruction, such as  mini-lessons, or assign individual worksheet practice to help students  master and apply writing skills.
2. Progress Monitoring
Because analytical rubrics isolate discreet writing tasks that are  components of different writing assignments, performance level data can  be charted on recording matrix  from one writing assignment to the next. These data can be analyzed by  class and individual performance and serve as progress monitoring.
3. Student Involvement
Analytical rubrics provide road maps for student writers to follow.  Specific expectations are set at the beginning of the writing  assignment. As in the example above, students can complete peer response  checklists on each writing task and then use the revision checklist to  respond to the teacher’s diagnostic assessment and/or the peer response.
4. Flexibility
Analytical rubrics allow the teacher to assess parts of a student  writing assignment and not have to grade each writing task. Examples: A  teacher might choose to assign an on-demand timed writing and then  diagnostically assess and record levels of performance on variety of  evidence. A teacher might choose to have a reader or parent assess and  record levels of performance on spelling, punctuation, and citation  format. A teacher might choose to work with colleagues in a  read-a-round, with each colleague assessing a different set of writing  tasks.
5. Language of Instruction and the Writing Process
Analytical rubrics provide the language of instruction for writers,  peers, parents, and teachers to discuss each writing task throughout the  steps of the writing process. These specific writing tasks help  students and teachers plan, draft, revise, edit, and publish their  writing.