From Standards to Rubrics in Six Steps

From Standards to Rubrics in Six Steps

Author: Kay Burke

Publisher: Corwin Press

Published: 2006-04-12

Total Pages: 233

ISBN-13: 1412917794

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Kay Burke provides a detailed six-step walk-through for creating successful student learning tasks and assessment rubrics linked to state standards and NCLB. A CD-ROM with templates is included.


From Standards to Rubrics in Six Steps

From Standards to Rubrics in Six Steps

Author: Kay Burke

Publisher: Corwin Press

Published: 2010-10-18

Total Pages: 233

ISBN-13: 1412987016

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Featuring a comprehensive six-step process for moving from standards to rubrics, this updated bestseller helps teachers build tasks, checklists, and rubrics; differentiate for special needs; and more.


How to Assess Authentic Learning

How to Assess Authentic Learning

Author: Kay Burke

Publisher: Corwin Press

Published: 2009-10-07

Total Pages: 233

ISBN-13: 1452274002

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Create assessments that meet state standards and target students’ learning needs! In this revised edition of her bestseller, Kay Burke provides a wide range of easy-to-implement alternative assessments that address today’s accountability requirements. Designed for use across all content areas, these formative assessments are rooted in the language of state standards and emphasize differentiating instruction to meet students’ diverse learning needs. Updated research and examples help K–12 teachers: Build Response to Intervention checklists for struggling students Develop unit plans using differentiated learning and assessment strategies Create portfolios that emphasize metacognition Design performance tasks that motivate and engage students Construct rubrics that describe indicators of quality work Create tests that focus on higher-order thinking skills


35 Rubrics and Checklists to Assess Reading and Writing

35 Rubrics and Checklists to Assess Reading and Writing

Author: Adele Fiderer

Publisher: Scholastic Inc.

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 84

ISBN-13: 9780590131025

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Drawing on her extensive experience as a teacher, the author shares quick, clear, and easy rubrics for accessing students' work. These ideas will help students learn the qualities of a good performance and give parents a detailed picture of their children's progress.


Teaching Unprepared Students

Teaching Unprepared Students

Author: Kathleen F. Gabriel

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2023-07-03

Total Pages: 91

ISBN-13: 1000980359

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As societal expectations about attending college have grown, professors report increasing numbers of students who are unprepared for the rigors of postsecondary education—not just more students with learning disabilities (whose numbers have more than tripled), but students (with and without special admission status) who are academically at-risk because of inadequate reading, writing and study skills. This book provides professors and their graduate teaching assistants—those at the front line of interactions with students—with techniques and approaches they can use in class to help at-risk students raise their skills so that they can successfully complete their studies.The author shares proven practices that will not only engage all students in a class, but also create the conditions—while maintaining high standards and high expectations—to enable at-risk and under-prepared students to develop academically and graduate with good grades. The author also explains how to work effectively with academic support units on campus. Within the framework of identifying those students who need help, establishing a rapport with them, adopting inclusive teaching strategies, and offering appropriate guidance, the book presents the theory teachers will need, and effective classroom strategies. The author covers teaching philosophy and goals; issues of discipline and behavior; motivation and making expectations explicit; classroom climate and learning styles; developing time management and study skills; as well as the application of “universal design” strategies.The ideas presented here—that the author has successfully employed over many years—can be easily integrated into any class.


Creating Wicked Students

Creating Wicked Students

Author: Paul Hanstedt

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2023-07-03

Total Pages: 181

ISBN-13: 1000980715

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In Creating Wicked Students, Paul Hanstedt argues that courses can and should be designed to present students with what are known as “wicked problems” because the skills of dealing with such knotty problems are what will best prepare them for life after college. As the author puts it, “this book begins with the assumption that what we all want for our students is that they be capable of changing the world....When a student leaves college, we want them to enter the world not as drones participating mindlessly in activities to which they’ve been appointed, but as thinking, deliberative beings who add something to society.”There’s a lot of talk in education these days about “wicked problems”—problems that defy traditional expectations or knowledge, problems that evolve over time: Zika, ISIS, political discourse in the era of social media. To prepare students for such wicked problems, they need to have wicked competencies, the ability to respond easily and on the fly to complex challenges. Unfortunately, a traditional education that focuses on content and skills often fails to achieve this sense of wickedness. Students memorize for the test, prepare for the paper, practice the various algorithms over and over again—but when the parameters or dynamics of the test or the paper or the equation change, students are often at a loss for how to adjust.This is a course design book centered on the idea that the goal in the college classroom—in all classrooms, all the time—is to develop students who are not just loaded with content, but capable of using that content in thoughtful, deliberate ways to make the world a better place. Achieving this goal requires a top-to-bottom reconsideration of courses, including student learning goals, text selection and course structure, day-to-day pedagogies, and assignment and project design. Creating Wicked Students takes readers through each step of the process, providing multiple examples at each stage, while always encouraging instructors to consider concepts and exercises in light of their own courses and students.


Rubric Assessment Goes to College

Rubric Assessment Goes to College

Author: Mary J. Goggins Selke

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 185

ISBN-13: 1475803230

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Do you want to expand working knowledge of how to construct, revise, and implement rubrics with specific how-to's and plenty of examples? Rubric Assessment Goes to College provides effective college-level rubrics that are the right tools for the job of objective, comprehensiv...


Balanced Assessment

Balanced Assessment

Author: Kay Burke

Publisher: Solution Tree Press

Published: 2010-03-25

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 1935543059

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Learn how to integrate formative and summative assessments seamlessly into instruction. The research, rationale, strategies, and examples provided in this book will help teachers develop their own repertoire of formative and summative assessments to monitor, grade, and make inferences about a student’s ability to meet standards and curriculum goals. Exercises at the end of each chapter provide opportunities to reflect and plan action steps.