Friday, April 29, 2011

Unit 4 Grading Rubric

Unit 4 Rubric (Argumentative Research Paper)

An “A” Paper…

· Efficiently introduces the issue addressed in the paper and provides adequate background information for that issue.

· Includes an effective thesis statement that:

o identifies the “who, what, where, when, & why” of the issue addressed; and

o makes an arguable claim about an issue.

· Supports this thesis logically throughout the paper by:

o identifying credible research/opinions that support the thesis and introducing those sources correctly;

o acknowledging credible research/opinions that do not match the thesis and introducing those sources correctly; and

o demonstrating how/why the thesis withstands opposing viewpoints.

· Builds the writer’s ethos by:

o including evidence of credible, pertinent research;

o using language and tone appropriate for the general academic audience; and

o demonstrating the writer’s ability to express an informed opinion without using first-person pronouns (I, me, my, mine, etc.).

· Cites all outside sources in the paper’s body and on the Works Cited page in MLA format.

· Includes a relevant and interesting title.

· Follows formatting guidelines (Times New Roman, double-spaced, 12 point, one-inch margins).

· Shows evidence of careful proofreading (almost no errors in spelling, usage, grammar, mechanics, etc.).

A “B” Paper…

· Introduces the issue addressed in the paper and provides adequate background information for that issue.

· Includes a strong thesis statement that makes an arguable claim about an issue.

· Supports this thesis throughout the majority of the paper in the ways listed above.

· Builds the writer’s ethos by:

o including evidence of credible, pertinent research;

o generally using language and tone appropriate for the g.a.a.; and

o avoiding first-person pronouns.

· Correctly cites all outside sources in the paper’s body and on the WC page.

· Includes a relevant title.

· Follows formatting guidelines.

· Has few errors in spelling, usage, grammar, mechanics, etc.

A “C” Paper…

· Introduces the issue and provides some background information, though this information may be either too little or too much.

· Includes a thesis statement that states the paper’s central argument.

· Generally supports this thesis in the body of the paper by:

o identifying research/opinions that match the thesis;

o acknowledging research/opinions that do not match the thesis; and/or

o attempting to show why the thesis withstands opposing viewpoints.

· Attempts to build the writer’s ethos by:

o demonstrating evidence of some credible and/or pertinent research;

o attempting the tone and language of scholarly writing; and

o largely avoiding first-person pronouns.

· Correctly cites all outside sources in the paper’s body and on the WC page.

· Includes a relevant title.

· Follows formatting guidelines.

· Has some errors in spelling, usage, grammar, mechanics, etc.; at times, these mistakes may detract from meaning.

A “D” Paper…

· Has an overly broad introduction or one that provides insufficient or irrelevant background information.

· Has no thesis statement, a thesis that does not match the paper, or a thesis statement that does not make an arguable claim.

· Generally does not support the thesis in the paper’s body OR includes body paragraphs that support contradicting points of view OR includes body paragraphs that lack a sense of controlling voice.

· Seriously harms the writer’s ethos by:

o demonstrating poor research skills and/or use of non-credible sources;

o failing to write in the language or tone appropriate for scholarly papers; and/or

o including first- and/or second-person pronouns.

· Incorrectly cites outside sources, either in the paper’s body or on the WC page.

· Has no title or an irrelevant title.

· Does not follow one or more formatting guideline.

· Has significant errors in spelling, etc.; these errors are often distracting.

An “F” Paper…

· Fails to meet minimum requirements; and/or

· Plagiarizes.

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