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Rubric Made Using:
RubiStar
( http://rubistar.4teachers.org )
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CATEGORY
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5 - Above Standards
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4 - Meets Standards
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3 - Approaching Standards
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2-0 - Below Standards
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Score
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Position Statement
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The position statement provides a clear, strong statement of the author's position on the topic.
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The position statement provides a clear statement of the author's position on the topic.
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A position statement is present, but does not make the author's position clear.
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There is no position statement.
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Support for Position
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Includes 3 or more pieces of evidence (facts, statistics, examples, real-life experiences) that support the position statement. The writer anticipates the reader's concerns, biases or arguments and has provided at least 1 counter-argument.
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Includes 3 or more pieces of evidence (facts, statistics, examples, real-life experiences) that support the position statement.
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Includes 2 pieces of evidence (facts, statistics, examples, real-life experiences) that support the position statement.
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Includes 1 or fewer pieces of evidence (facts, statistics, examples, real-life experiences).
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Sequencing
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Arguments and support are provided in a logical order that makes it easy and interesting to follow the author's train of thought.
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Arguments and support are provided in a fairly logical order that makes it reasonably easy to follow the author's train of thought.
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A few of the support details or arguments are not in an expected or logical order, distracting the reader and making the essay seem a little confusing.
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Many of the support details or arguments are not in an expected or logical order, distracting the reader and making the essay seem very confusing.
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Transitions
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A variety of thoughtful transitions are used. They clearly show how ideas are connected
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Transitions show how ideas are connected, but there is little variety
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Some transitions work well, but some connections between ideas are fuzzy.
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The transitions between ideas are unclear OR nonexistent.
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Audience
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Demonstrates a clear understanding of the potential reader and uses appropriate vocabulary and arguments. Anticipates reader's questions and provides thorough answers appropriate for that audience.
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Demonstrates a general understanding of the potential reader and uses vocabulary and arguments appropriate for that audience.
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Demonstrates some understanding of the potential reader and uses arguments appropriate for that audience.
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It is not clear who the author is writing for.
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