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Rubric Template For Powerpoint Presentation

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Rubric for Hero Presentation

Transcript: Grading the Prezi Presentation 20 pts. -- Well rehearsed with smooth delivery that captivated the audience. Outstanding quality. Excellent audience engagement (making eye contact w/ most of class) w/ few stumbles & an audible voice. 12 pts. -- Rehearsed with fairly smooth delivery that held the audience's attention most of the time. Very good connection with audience. (You made good eye contact with class members.) 10 pts. -- Delivery was not smooth but it held the interest of the audience most of the time. Average quality. Engagement w/ audience needed improvement. 5 pts. -- Delivery was not smooth and audience's attention was often lost. Poor engagement with audience (making little to no eye contact with class members. Works Cited Rubric - 100 points. 20 pts. -- Made excellent use of font, color, graphics, effects, etc., to enhance the presentation. Typeface colors and sizes were visually pleasing and large enough to read. Used four design principles throughout. 15 pts. -- Made very good use of font, color, graphics, effects, etc., to enhance presentation. Typeface choices usually visually pleasing and legible. Used at least three design principles most of the time. 10 pts. -- Made use of font, color, graphics, effects, etc., but occasionally these detracted from the presentation. Followed two design principles w/ inconsistent effects. 5 pts. -- Made use of font, color, graphics, effects, etc., but these often distracted from the presentation. Followed one design principle. Presentation Organization 10 pts. -- All research articles, images, and video sources were listed in proper MLA format. 8 pts. -- Most, but one or two research articles, images, and video sources were listed in MLA format. 5 pts. -- Some research articles, images, and video sources were listed, but others were not. Some sources not in proper MLA format. 0 pts. -- No sources were cited. Works Cited page missing. Content Graphic Design 20 pts. -- Content was well organized according to the required topics. Covers all aspects. 16 pts. -- Content was well organized but not fully responding to the required topics. Covers most aspects. 13 pts. -- Content was organized but some pieces seemed out of place. 8 pts. -- There was no clear or logical organizational structure, just many facts and not much analysis. 30 pts. -- In depth coverage with details and examples. Subject knowledge was excellent. You covered all of the required aspects in excellent and balanced detail. 24 pts. -- Included essential knowledge about the topic. Subject knowledge appeared to be very good. You fully covered all but one or two of the topics, which were hinted at, but not fully described. 20 pts. -- Included essential information, but many areas needed detailed information and/or you failed to address several topics. 10 pts. -- Included minimal information and you answered only one or two of the topics. Information was not balanced: too much detail on one or two aspects and not enough on others.

Presentation Rubric

Transcript: Your task Multimedia Plagiarism is a major concern. You may use quotes from your sources, but nothing longer than a phrase or sentence, and only for effect. What counts as an effective use of images in a presentation? What should the presenter avoid? Work together with another partner pair to combine your expectations into a list of 5-6 measurable outcomes in order to evaluate our presentations. Submit via Google Docs (save a copy in each person's folder) Quantity Your final task Audio Now that you have a collecting of advise and warnings, create a rubric for a successful presentation with a partner on Google Docs. Here's an incomplete example... Your task Computers closed. Use notebook to record ideas. At each stage, I'm going to give you a minute or two to write down your ideas about what makes a presentation successful. You will be submitting your list today. Content Originality What makes a multimedia presentation successful? What do you want to see in others' presentations? What should be avoided? Essential Elements Quality We know that the audio for the presentation must be recorded. What do we need from the audio portion of the presentation? What should be avoided? How will we recognize quality content in a presentation? Aside from a checklist of information, what will count as achieving or excelling? I usually avoid this question, but... How much information is enough? How will the presenter know if his or her presentation contains the required amount of information? Presentation Rubric Images

Rubric Presentation

Transcript: Rubrics! Prezi Template by Lindy Medlin Why use a Rubric? Which duck is the best? (Wilson, 2016) (Grom, 2009) Subjective Assignments Subjective Assignments: are assignments that require unique individualized responses. RUBRICS: are used for subjective assignments Rubrics: Rubrics help to solve this problem by eliminating bias and creating a measurable standard for subjective assignments (Teachings in Education, 2016). Instructions & Expectations Rubrics: provide instructions and expectations Rubrics also help to prevent confused students by specifying the assignments requirements. (Woman, 2011) (Morett, 2017) Rubrics help the teacher to make sure they don't forget to mention any instructions. 2 Types 2 Types of Rubrics: holistic and analytic Holistic Rubric: View the assignment as a whole Think of it as a check list! *These can be more subjective, but easier to grade for teachers. Analytic Rubric: Divide the assignment into smaller components than a holistic rubric The components are detailed and have assigned point values *These are more specific, but take teachers more time to grade. When to present a rubric Rubrics: when to present them Present your rubric when you are presenting the assignment. This gives students the opportunity to ask questions! (Student, 2016) (How, 2017) References: References: Grom. (2009, October 15). Draw Ducks. Retrieved September 25, 2017, from https://www.pinterest.com How to Get a Teacher to Raise Your Grade. (2017, July 11). Retrieved September 25, 2017, from http://www.wikihow.com Morett, L. (2017). Gallery of Confused High School Student Cartoon. Retrieved September 24, 2017, from www.lacasamorett.com Student asking question clipart clipartfest. (2016). Retrieved September 25, 2017, from http://cliparting.com Teachings in Education. (2016, December 16). Rubrics for Assessment [Video file]. Retrieved September 20, 2017, from https://www.youtube.com Themes and Wallpapers. (2017, April 7). Retrieved September 24, 2017, from www.themewallpapers.com Wilson, J. (2016, June 06). Mallard duck watercolour PRINT -duck gift - Country Kitchen original painting - Puddle Paints Art. Retrieved September 25, 2017, from https://www.pinterest.com Woman Cartoon Clip Art. (2011). Retrieved September 24, 2017, from www.clker.com Lets Practice!! Quiz Time!!!! 1 correct answer = 1 yummy candy! (Themes, 2017) Question 1: List one reason why teachers use a rubric? Question 2: What type of rubric views the assignment as a whole? When do you present a rubric to the class? Question 3: What type of rubric is easier for teachers to grade? Question 4: How do rubrics help student? Question 5: Define a subjective assignment: Question 6: What type of rubric assigns point values for individual components? Question 7: How do rubrics help teachers with multiple classes? Question 8:

Rubric Presentation

Transcript: Rubrics in Education C: Why Use a Rubric? Think about a time that you received a poor grade. Do you understand why you received the grade you did? What could you and/or the teacher have done differently? Bell-ringer Writing Rubric " A rubric is a scoring tool that explicitly represents the performance expectations for an assignment or piece of work." Oral Presentation Rubric R: What is a Rubric? Poster Presentation Rubric - clear intro - thorough research to support the argument - clear conclusion - organized, coherent writing style - focus on grammar - points allotted within each column Grading scale: 1 (weakest) - 4 (strongest) - clear and original idea - well-organized - academic language use (no slang) - speaks clearly and does not mispronounce words - has prepared the presentation - focus on neatness - punctuation & writing is coherent - proper grammar - photos included - explanation provided - presentation adheres to time assigned and expected Why is a rubric a good tool for evaluation? Why Rubrics Are Used Rubrics... Increase transparency towards assignment expectations Ensures grading standards are unchanged over time Maintains consistency in the presence of multiple graders Provides a fair evaluation by both teacher and student How Rubrics Help Student Performance Advantages to Student Communicates expectations and requirements of assignment Helps students monitor their areas of strength and growths alongside weaknesses and areas requiring improvement Reduces anxiety towards assignments The rubric can be used as a road map to plan out an assignment How Rubrics Benefit Teachers Advantages to Teachers Provides a snapshot of the strengths and weaknesses of your class Reduces time spent on grading due to uncertainty Evidence to justify certain grades to parent/guardian Features of a Rubric K: Features of a Rubric Criteria Must be specific Gradations (usually 4-6 or 3-5) Descriptors for performance level Descriptions Descriptive language Continuity Difference in quality should match Reliability Allows teachers to arrive at similar scores Validity Measures what is central to the performance, not what is easy to score Features of an Emerging Rubric K: Emerging Rubric Does not allow for flexibility Criteria is too general Too lengthy Tasks are not related to the skills Uses negative language, such as "none," or "never" - too long/too many columns - it is too wordy, not concise - the criteria is mixed - learning outcomes are not clear - the levels of proficiency are not logical - repetitive: "the extent" R: Emerging Rubric Example Features of a Good Rubric Authentic to student's experience Language is easy to read Specifies expectations Includes examples Reveals a student's level of success K: Good Rubric - clear & concise, not too wordy - designates specifies areas for evaluation - appropriate amount of columns/rows - clear progression of evaluation R: Good Rubric Example How to Make Your Own Rubric: K: How to Create a Rubric? Scores across the top, criteria down the side Define your goal What should students know and be able to do? How do you know that students have met these standards? Language is key! Use action verbs! Language should be appropriate for grade level Include all of your expectations (neatness, organization) Teach students how to use it K: Bloom's Taxonomy An example template... https://www.thoughtco.com/rubric-template-2081369 With a Template Complete This Rubric 1. Is there anything you would change about this rubric? Why or why not? 2. What would you want students to know before writing their essay? Follow-Up Questions - TeachersPayTeachers.com is a great resource to utilize for exploring different materials from other teachers and finding rubrics online! - Collaborate with your colleagues and work together to create one and adapt a previous to your specific class purposes Steal It From a Colleague Possible Difficulties of Incorporating into Content Classrooms C: Possible Difficulties Language used in rubric is unclear, abstract, or not scaffolded Criteria is too general and does not fit the specific assignment Concrete examples might be more effective Scales are not straightforward Suggestions/Adaptations Differentiate the assignment simplify modify and change learning goals and grading criteria Suggestions/adaptations What else do you think is important about rubrics that we may have not touched upon? Exit Ticket

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