I recently received a grade on a project that was evaluated using a rubric. The grade was one that I’m happy with, so I really shouldn’t have anything to complain about, but I’m dissatisfied nonetheless. Though I received a good score, the only feedback I was given was circled numbers on a rubric.
Which is why I am troubled by rubrics.
Although the rubric certainly helped me approach the project – I knew what I would be evaluated on before I even started writing – it did not give me any idea of what I did well or what I could have done better. Now, I know it’s possible to use a rubric better than this example, but I’m concerned that in using a rubric as a time-saving measure, it’s all too easy for a teacher to fall into the habit of providing minimal feedback for the sake of fast grading. After all, the numbers circled correspond to a certain performance level. But, for many students, that’s not good enough. I’m a graduate student and have been employed as a writer, and I’m unable to derive much feedback from the circled numbers on my rubric; how can we expect high school students to make meaning of the same?
In exploring my aversion to rubrics, I’ve found more support for them as a tool than anything else. I’m beginning to come around to the idea of using rubrics, but I think we need to be certain that we are using them well. And, perhaps, not using them as the only tool for feedback, especially in a secondary English class. If we are to provide our students with meaningful feedback that they can make sense of and use to improve their writing, we need to be more specific than circled numbers on a chart.
But I could be wrong about this.
According to this article from teachervision.com, rubrics provide several advantages for students:
- “Teachers can increase the quality of their direct instruction by providing focus, emphasis, and attention to particular details as a model for students.
- Students have explicit guidelines regarding teacher expectations.
- Students can use rubrics as a tool to develop their abilities.
- Teachers can reuse rubrics for various activities.”
In addition, the article states that “many experts believe that rubrics improve students’ end products and therefore increase learning. When teachers evaluate papers or projects, they know implicitly what makes a good final product and why. When students receive rubrics beforehand, they understand how they will be evaluated and can prepare accordingly.”
Nothing I’ve read in favor of the use of rubrics has convinced me that they’re truly useful for students. I’ve been at a loss to find a better alternative thus far (and I don’t think I could accurately determine what my alternative should be until I’m in a classroom for real. At this point, I’m just speculating.)
Maja Wilson’s article “The View from Somewhere” presents the argument that the use of the rubric provides an assessment without considering the reader or the writer thought processes, hence “the view from nowhere.” But good writing is all about the reader, and how the writer conveys ideas to said reader. Maja writes “rubrics were developed to make direct writing assessments palatable to testing companies—and thank goodness, or multiple-choice grammar tests would still be the only acceptable method of determining writing skill. However, the disagreement that is inevitable when unique individuals bring their perspectives to a text doesn’t lend itself to objective testing procedures.”
Because every reader and every reader and every writer will bring different perspectives to the writing process, the rubric provides only a false sense of objectivity to the assessment process. I’ve been told that the rubric allows for several teachers to evaluate the same essay (presumably an essay written for a standardized test) exactly the same way. In this way, the rubric seems to provide greater accuracy in grading writing, but I’d argue the opposite. Being standard is not the same as being accurate.
As a writer, I’ve made the most improvement to my writing when I’ve had a good editor. A person who is both a reader and a writer and can help me determine where my sentences are unclear and where my structure could be better. In the time I spent editing my college newspaper and working as a newsletter editor in a post-college communications job, I’ve been fortunate that I’ve had really, really talented editors. This experience, at least in part, is something I want to provide for my students; maybe the writing conference in place of the rubric.
But I also get that it’s not practical. Even with only 25-50 students (which I realize is unrealistically low), it seems mathematically impractical to spend even 10-15 minutes working with each student.
At this point, there are more questions than answers. It’s something for another day.
Sorry, world. I still hate rubrics.
