Academic literature on the topic 'Scoring rubric'

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Journal articles on the topic "Scoring rubric"

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Jonan, Yunita Rochmawati. "Pengembangan Rubrik Penskoran pada Asesmen Otentik untuk Materi Volume dan Luas Balok." Journal of Medives : Journal of Mathematics Education IKIP Veteran Semarang 4, no. 2 (July 16, 2020): 275. http://dx.doi.org/10.31331/medivesveteran.v4i2.1174.

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ABSTRAK Tujuan penelitian pengembangan ini adalah menghasilkan sebuah rubrik penskoran pada asesmen otentikuntuk materi volume dan luas balok yang dapat digunakan oleh guru dan siswa. Rubrik ini dibuat sesuai dengan standar penilaian dalam kurikulum 2013. Penelitian pengembangan (R&D) ini menggunakan model Borg and Gall yang terdiri dari lima tahap yaitu penelitian dan pengumpulan data awal, perencanaan, pengembangan format produk, uji coba skala kecil, revisi akhir dan penyempurnaan produk. Hasil penelitian pengembangan ini berupa rubrik penyekoran holistik dan analitik dengan nilai sangat valid sebesar 94%. Analisis dari penelitian ini adalah angket kebutuhan bagi guru dan siswa sedangkan uji coba dilakukan melalui perorangan, kelompok kecil dan kelompok besar. Sedangkan kelayakan rubrik penskoran dari penilaian oleh ahli dengan menggunakan angket uji validitas materi, hasil belajar siswa, respon siswa serta tanggapan guru pengajar. Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa rubrik penskoran ini efektif dalam membantu memperbaiki hasil ulangan dan cukup praktis serta dapat dipergunakan untuk memberikan penilaian hasil belajar yang sesuai dengan kurikulum 2013. Kata kunci: rubrik, penskoran, asesmen otentik. ABSTRACT The purpose of this development research is to produce a scoring rubric on an authenticity assessment for the volume and area materials that can be used by teachers and students. The rubric is made in based on the assessment standards in the 2013 curriculum. This development research (R&D) uses the Borg and Gall model consisting of five stages of preliminary data research and collection, planning, product format development, small-scale trials, final revisions and product enhancements. The results of this development research include holistic and analytic scoring rubric with a very valid score of 94%. The rubric is analyzed fromquestionnaire for teachers and students, while trials are conducted through individuals, small groups and large groups. The feasibility of the scoring rubric from assessment by members by using the material validity test questionnaire, student learning results, student response and teacher responses. The results of this study show that the scoring rubric is effective in helping to improve the test results and is practical and can be used to provide assessment of learning outcomes in accordance with the 2013 curriculum. Keywords: rubric, scoring, authentic assessment.
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Al-Shayeb, Abdelhafez Q. "The Effect of Score Resolution Method among Evaluators' Ratings of Writing Tasks and Number of Scoring Rubric Categories on the Operational Score." Journal of Educational and Psychological Studies [JEPS] 7, no. 2 (March 1, 2013): 226. http://dx.doi.org/10.24200/jeps.vol7iss2pp226-237.

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The study aimed at investigating the reliability indices of the operational score calculated by three different methods of score resolution among evaluators' ratings of a writing task (the averaged score of the original ratings, the averaged score of the expert rating and the original ratings, the averaged score of the expert rating and the closest rating of the original ratings). Two scoring rubrics (five categories, seven categories) were used. The effect of score resolution method was examined, and scoring rubric in the operational score calculated in one of the above mentioned methods. Data were obtained from the answers of 232 male and female teachers to a previously developed writing task. The writings were blindly assessed by six raters using the two pre-developed scoring rubrics. The results revealed differences among reliability indices due to the resolution method used to calculate the operational score regardless of the scoring rubric being used. Repeated measures ANOVA with between-subjects factor revealed significant main effect of both factors i.e., score resolution method, and scoring rubric in the calculated operational score using one of the aforementioned resolution methods.
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Palmquist, Bruce C. "Scoring Rubric for interview assessment." Physics Teacher 35, no. 2 (February 1997): 88–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.2344601.

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Tang, Xiaowei, Janet Coffey, and Daniel M. Levin. "Reconsidering the Use of Scoring Rubrics in Biology Instruction." American Biology Teacher 77, no. 9 (November 1, 2015): 669–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/abt.2015.77.9.4.

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Scoring rubrics are widely employed across content areas and grade levels, including in high school biology classes. Besides regular external use within accountability systems, educators also have advanced their instructional use inside classrooms. In recent years, a consensus appears to be emerging in the educational literature that instructional use of rubrics is beneficial for student learning, and numerous examples in the research and practitioner literature establish their importance in teachers’ planning, instruction, and assessment. We examine this assumption through close analysis of students’ use of a scoring rubric in a high school biology classroom. We explore how instructional use of a scoring rubric influences biology teaching and learning activities, what messages about knowledge and learning such use conveys to students, and what influence such use may have on students’ emergent understandings of what constitutes quality in biological thinking and practice. Our analysis suggests that instructional use of scoring rubrics can actually undermine the very learning it is intended to support. We discuss an alternative way to help students understand what constitutes high-quality work, and we draw implications for science teacher education.
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STODDARD, HUGH A., CORY A. LABRECQUE, and TOBY SCHONFELD. "Using a Scoring Rubric to Assess the Writing of Bioethics Students." Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 25, no. 2 (March 9, 2016): 301–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963180115000602.

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Abstract:Educators in bioethics have struggled to find valid and reliable assessments that transcend the “reproduction of knowledge” to target more important skill sets. This manuscript reports on the process of developing and grading a minimal-competence comprehensive examination in a bioethics master’s degree program. We describe educational theory and practice for the creation and deployment of scoring rubrics for high-stakes performance assessments that reduce scoring inconsistencies. The rubric development process can also benefit the program by building consensus among stakeholders regarding program goals and student outcomes.We describe the Structure of the Observed Learning Outcome taxonomy as a mechanism for rubric design and provide an example of how we applied that taxonomy to define pass/fail cut scores. Details about domains of assessment and writing descriptors of performance are also presented. Despite the laborious work required to create a scoring rubric, we found the effort to be worthwhile for our program.
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Gorjipour, Hasneh, and Maedeh Hoseinpoor. "The Effects of Using Scoring Rubrics and Self-Regulation Strategies on the EFL Intermediate Students’ Reading Gains." International Journal of English Language Teaching 6, no. 1 (December 11, 2018): 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.5430/ijelt.v6n1p20.

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Rubrics are considered beneficial for both teaching and learning, especially when they are practiced as formativeassessment (Panadero & Jonsson, 2013). By applying self-regulation strategies together with reading based rubric,this study mainly intended to examine the effects of rubrics and self-regulation strategies on the Iranian learners'reading comprehension gains across gender. The participants of the study were 60 male and female EFL studentsselected based on their PET scores. Subsequently, a pretest of reading comprehension was administered to the groupsof experimental and control as well as male and female groups to determine their proficiency level. Then, theexperimental group underwent training on how to use reading rubric and self-regulation strategies. At the end of thecourse, the reading comprehension post-test was re-administered. The findings suggested that there was a statisticallysignificant difference between rubric-oriented classes in conjunction with learners’ use of self-regulation strategiesand rubric-free classes in terms of the students’ reading comprehension gains. Furthermore, the results showed thatthe male learners outperformed their female counterparts in utilizing self-regulation strategies and rubrics in readingcomprehension. Moreover findings suggested some theoretical and pedagogical implications for the languagelearners, teachers, and syllabus designers.
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Fahmi, NFN. "Absorbent Power Power Subject Matter and Reliability Math Test Form Item Essay." Indonesian Journal of Educational Assesment 3, no. 1 (June 26, 2020): 42. http://dx.doi.org/10.26499/ijea.v3i1.58.

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This study aims to determine the proportion correct of mathematics subject matter and compare the reliability of essay tests that are scored with 3 different rubric models. The method used in this research is an experiment using design treatments by subjects, an experiment using one group (one group experiment) which is also an experimental group and a control group in different experimental periods. Schools that were sampled were 6 public and private junior high schools and students were sampled as many as 452 students. The research sample was determined by two-stage stratified random sampling. The objects in this study consisted of 22 essay questions in Mathematics for junior high school compiled from the same test specifications. Scoring uses 3 scoring rubrics models, namely scoring rubric Model 1 (0,1), Model 2 (0,1,2), and Model 3 (keywords). The results obtained from this study indicate the reliability of the mathematical essay test on the scoring rubric of model 1 is 0.6859, model 2 is 0.7025, and model 3 is 0.6986. Test reliability of the three scoring rubrics is high or reliable. Students' competence in completing mathematical essay questions is still low, which is under 50%. Only mathematical essay questions calculate volume at the cognitive level of knowledge and understanding above 70%. Student competencies in solving questions that measure reasoning is an average of 12.20%. In other words, the proportion correct of subject matter in two-dimentional figure and space less than 50%, this shows that students still do not understand the concept of the subject matter, especially the material of the central angular relationship, arc length, sector area, which can only be answered correctly by 17.58% of students.
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Allen, Abigail A., Apryl L. Poch, and Erica S. Lembke. "An Exploration of Alternative Scoring Methods Using Curriculum-Based Measurement in Early Writing." Learning Disability Quarterly 41, no. 2 (August 16, 2017): 85–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0731948717725490.

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This manuscript describes two empirical studies of alternative scoring procedures used with curriculum-based measurement in writing (CBM-W). Study 1 explored the technical adequacy of a trait-based rubric in first grade. Study 2 explored the technical adequacy of a trait-based rubric, production-dependent, and production-independent scores in third grade. Results of Study 1 suggest that the rubric holds promise as a valid measure of sentence writing ability in first grade and has utility as a supplemental scoring procedure when using CBM-W as a screening tool. Results of Study 2 show that correct word sequences maintained the highest correlation coefficients across time with the trait-based rubric, but the other scoring procedures might offer promise as reliable alternative scoring methods. However, high internal correlations among the text features of the rubric along with highly variable interrater reliability suggest that caution must be taken in interpreting results.
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Pamungkas, Dewi Sari, and Irwan Sulistyanto. "TEACHERS’ PERCEPTION ON WRITING ASSESSMENT BASED ON 2013 CURRICULUM AT MAN 2 KEDIRI." Jurnal Pendidikan Bahasa Inggris Proficiency 3, no. 2 (July 31, 2021): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.32503/proficiency.v3i2.1914.

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This research is purposed to describe teachers’ perception on writing assessment based on 2013 curriculum at MAN 2 Kediri. This research used descriptive qualitative as the approach. The subject of this research is six English teachers of MAN 2 Kediri. There are two tools that were used to get the data namely questionnaire and interview. The results of this research are (1) in attitude assessment, almost all teachers of MAN 2 Kediri arrange the instrument in the right way, but the scoring rubric was not appropriate with 2013 curriculum (2) in knowledge assessment, all teachers of MAN 2 Kediri arrange the question and scoring rubric appropriately with 2013 curriculum (3) in psychomotor assessment, teachers arrange the question in psychomotor assessment in the right way but the choosing of question is not suitable for psychomotor assessment. For the scoring, all teachers use analytic rubric, but, do not concern the criteria in the scoring rubric. (4) most of teachers do not have any problems in the writing assessment. For the suggestions, teachers should add the description in scoring rubric for attitude assessment as the same with 2013 curriculum. Next, in choosing the question/task should be appropriate with the aspect that will be assessed. The last, teachers should determine the criteria for scoring rubric in knowledge and psychomotor assessment.
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Galván-Sánchez, Inmaculada, Domingo Verano-Tacoronte, Sara M. González-Betancor, Margarita Fernández-Monroy, and Alicia Bolívar-Cruz. "Assessing oral presentation skills in Electrical Engineering: Developing a valid and reliable rubric." International Journal of Electrical Engineering & Education 54, no. 1 (July 28, 2016): 17–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0020720916659501.

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Oral presentation is one of the most important transversal competences for the professional career of Electrical Engineers. To develop and assess this competence, scoring rubrics are useful academic tools. The main purpose of this study is to contribute to the understanding of the learning and assessment of oral presentation skills of future Electrical Engineers by using a scoring rubric as a teaching resource. A pilot experiment was carried out in the 2011/2012 academic year in a course in the ninth semester of Electrical Engineering studies with 64 students. In order to acquire the oral competence, students had to present a marketing plan for an industrial electrical project in front of an audience. Feedback was collected in meetings held with teachers and students after the presentations. As a result, the need to review the rubric was detected, in order to make its use easier. The rubric’s design was improved. In the 2012/2013 academic year, 86 students participated in a new experiment using the improved rubric in the same subject. Intra-rater consistency was shown by the scale’s reliability, measured with Cronbach’s alpha. Regarding inter-rater consistency, two procedures were used: holistic and analytic. The holistic procedure revealed a positive and relatively high correlation between the global scores given by each of the two raters. The analytic procedure showed an acceptable level of inter-rater consensus. Through a questionnaire, quantitative data were collected reflecting students’ satisfaction with the use of the improved scoring rubric. The results reveal the rubric promotes students’ learning by providing them with a clear orientation to improve their performance on current academic assignments and in future professional situations. So, the analyses show that the proposed rubric is valid, reliable and, suitable to teach and assess oral presentations in a simulated professional scenario for Electrical Engineers.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Scoring rubric"

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Lebrun, Nathalie. "Drawing assessment protocol for adults with aphasia: a rubric for scoring." Thesis, Wichita State University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10057/6823.

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The purpose of this study was to determine if a scoring rubric developed by the investigator could differentiate scores on the Drawing Assessment Protocol (DAP) (Alarcon, 2007) for persons with aphasia and for persons with no history of the specific language disorder. From these scores, the study also sought to explore whether adults with aphasia perform differently on the DAP compared to adults with no history of acquired brain injury. Additionally, the study was designed to investigate possible performance correlations between how adults with aphasia perform on DAP and to the drawing section of the Western Aphasia Battery-Revised (WAB-R) (Kertesz, 2006). Eight dyads containing six adults with aphasia and their communication partners as well as two dyads with no history of aphasia participated in the study. The two dyads with no history of aphasia were age and gender matched with two dyads in the aphasia group. The investigator obtained data from the administration of the drawing section of the WAB-R and DAP. The investigator rated the DAP drawings on the following measures: clarity, completeness, recognizability, and willingness to draw based the scoring rubric designed for this study. Scoring differentiation trends between the aphasia group and typical group indicated that the suggested rubric may be a beneficial scoring tool for the DAP. Parallels in scores between the WAB-R and DAP further supports this indication. Findings from this study warrant the use of the DAP and rubric with a larger pool of participants with aphasia in both research and clinical settings. Revisions to the recognizability measure should be made to help further differentiate scores along that measure.
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Health Professions, Dept. of Communication Sciences and Disorders
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Jimenez, Laura. "Estimating the Reliability of Concept Map Ratings Using a Scoring Rubric Based on Three Attributes." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2010. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2284.

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Concept maps provide a way to assess how well students have developed an organized understanding of how the concepts taught in a unit are interrelated and fit together. However, concept maps are challenging to score because of the idiosyncratic ways in which students organize their knowledge (McClure, Sonak, & Suen, 1999). The construct a map or C-mapping" task has been shown to capture students' organized understanding. This "C-mapping" task involves giving students a list of concepts and asking them to produce a map showing how these concepts are interrelated. The purpose of this study was twofold: (a) to determine to what extent the use of the restricted C-mapping technique coupled with the threefold scoring rubric produced reliable ratings of students conceptual understanding from two examinations, and (b) to project how the reliability of the mean ratings for individual students would likely vary as a function of the average number of raters and rating occasions from two examinations. Nearly three-fourths (73%) of the variability in the ratings for one exam and (43 %) of the variability for the other exam were due to dependable differences in the students' understanding detected by the raters. The rater inconsistencies were higher for one exam and somewhat lower for the other exam. The person-to-rater interaction was relatively small for one exam and somewhat higher for the other exam. The rater-by-occasion variance components were zero for both exams. The unexplained variance accounted for 19% on one exam and 14% on the other. The size of the reliability coefficient of student concept map scores varied across the two examinations. A reliability of .95 and .93 for relative and absolute decision was obtained for one exam. A reliability of .88 and .78. for absolute and relative decision was obtained for the other exam. Increasing the number of raters from one to two on one rating occasion would yield a greater increase in the reliability of the ratings at a lower cost than increasing the number of rating occasions. The same pattern holds for both exams.
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Soper, Shannon Bryn. "Evidences of Critical Thinking in the Writing of First-Year College Students." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2015. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6171.

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A healthy civil society depends on citizens who have mature critical thinking skills and a willingness to entertain opposing points of view. The development of critical thinking in young adults has long been studied, but there has been little agreement on what the attributes of critical thinking are and how to reliably assess them. While many studies have attempted to assess the critical thinking abilities of college students, none have yet measured critical thinking through using the Critical Thinking Analytic Rubric (CTAR) to assess first-year college students' writing. This study used a modified version of the CTAR rubric to investigate students' critical thinking in writing completed for an American Heritage course. Four hypotheses were tested: (1) that raters would use the rubric with high inter-rater reliability estimates; (2) that there would be a significant relationship between the scores from the earlier holistic rubric used in the 2015 Hansen et al. study and the scores from the analytic rubric used in this study; (3) that there would be a significant relationship between analytic scores and ACT and GPA scores; (4) that there would be a significant relationship between essay score and gender. Findings included the following: (1) The inter-rater reliability for the overall scores of the papers was 0.898, which exceeds the 0.70 acceptable level. However, the inter-rater reliability for sub-scores was negative and required further investigation. (2) There was no significant relationship between the scores of the Hansen et al. study and this study. (3) There was no significant relationship between essay scores and ACT and GPA scores. (4) There was a significant relationship between essay scores and gender, with female students scoring higher than male students.
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Granekull, Therese. "Kamratbedömning i naturvetenskap på mellanstadiet : formativ återkoppling genom gruppsamtal." Licentiate thesis, Malmö högskola, Institutionen för natur, miljö, samhälle (NMS), 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-7595.

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Kamratbedömning kan ha en positiv effekt på elevers lärande. För att uppnå denna positiva effekt måste elever kunna ge återkoppling till sina kamrater och även ta emot återkoppling från sina kamrater. Elever måste också kunna använda den återkoppling som de får. Återkoppling kan ges på fyra olika nivåer, uppgiftsnivå, processnivå, självregleringsnivå och personnivå. Att använda elever som lärande resurser för varandra, är en av nyckelstrategierna inom formativ bedömning. Fokus på formativ bedömning och användning av den samma har ökat inom skolan. Det, tillsammans med att det inte finns många studier som undersöker formativ bedömning med ett ämnesinnehåll i svensk kontext, är exempel på vad som ligger till grund för studien. Det övergripande syftet med denna studie var att öka kunskapen om hur kamratbedömning genomförs i naturvetenskap på mellanstadiet. Fokus riktades dels mot hur lärare implementerar kamratbedömning, men framförallt mot hur elever ger varandra återkoppling. För att undersöka hur och på vilka nivåer som 11-åriga elever ger varandra återkoppling, genomförde elever kamratbedömning i mindre grupp efter att enskilt ha besvarat uppgifter med ett naturvetenskapligt innehåll. Insamling av data skedde i flera steg. När läraren gav eleverna instruktioner kring bedömningsmatrisen, uppgifterna och den kamratbedömning som de skulle genomföra, observerades och videofilmades detta. Elevernas kamratbedömningssamtal i grupp, videofilmades också. Därefter intervjuades eleverna enskilt.Studiens resultat visade att eleverna fick återkoppling på olika nivåer av sina kamrater. Den återkoppling som var mest förekommande, var på uppgiftsnivå. Det fanns exempel på återkoppling på andra nivåer också i materialet, samt exempel där det inte förekom någon återkoppling alls. När eleverna bedömde varandras svar, fokuserade de på mängden naturvetenskapliga begrepp i kamraternas svar. Slutsatser som dragits utifrån studiens resultat var bland andra att elever behöver träna både på kamratbedömning och på att ge användbar återkoppling, samt att lärare bör vara medvetna om att deras instruktioner är betydelsefulla när det gäller hur kamratbedömningen faller ut. En annan slutsats är att kamratbedömning med ämnesinnehåll, kräver både bedömarfärdighet och ämneskunskap.
Peer assessment may have a positive effect on student learning. In order to have these positive effect students have to be able to give feedback to their peer and also to receive feedback from their peer. The students also have to be able to use the given feedback. Using students as learning resources to each other is a key strategy within formative assessment. The feedback that is given can be directed at four different levels, task level, process level, self-regulation level and self-level. Using peers as learning resources, is one of the key strategies within formative assessment. Focus on formative assessment and the use of it, have increased within school. That, and the fact that there are not many studies that examines formative assessment with science content, are a part of the background to the conducted study.The overall purpose of the study was to contributed to the field concerning peer assessment in science with 11-year old students. The focus was partly how teachers implement peer assessment, but above all how students give feedback. In order to examine how and in what different levels student give each other feedback, students conducted peer assessment in small groups, after they had answered questions concerning science. Data collection was done in the following steps. At first, the teacher gave the students instructions about the tasks, the scoring rubric, how to assess and so on. While doing that, the teacher was observed and video recorded. Next step concerned the students. They answered the questions and then had peer assessment in small groups. This was also video recorded. Later on the students were interviewed. The students received different kinds of feedback, mostly at task level, from their peer. Some examples of feedback at other levels were also discovered. When students assessed each other’s answers, they looked at the amount of science concepts that were used in their peer’s answers. The results suggest that students need to practice peer assessment, how to give useful feedback and that the teacher need to be aware of that given instruction may turn out differently from what is expected. The results also show that students believe that peer assessment is useful and that feedback is given. This was contradictory from what was seen in some of the observations of the peer assessment. Conclusions are for example that students need both assessment skills and scientific knowledge.
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Pucheu, Paula Marie. "An Investigation of the Relationships Between the Scoring Rubrics Inventory and the Metacognitive Awareness Inventory as Reported by Secondary School Core-Subject Teachers." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2008. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/663.

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The promise of increased student achievement through educational reform is delivered still-born if teachers do not know how to implement complex instructional practices and sophisticated analysis of student performance. Metacognitive awareness is crucial to the adoption and application of proven educational initiatives. Teachers who successfully implement criterion-referenced assessment instruction, scoring rubrics, transfer to their students the metacognitive knowledge and skills of how to learn. This study is predicated on the research assumptions that metacognition and its attendant skills are critical to the successful implementation of scoring rubrics. A researcher-developed instrument, the Scoring Rubrics Inventory (SRI) and the Metacognitive Awareness Inventory (MAI) were distributed to core-subject teachers from three large public schools in Southwest Louisiana. From a population of sixty-eight (N=68) voluntary participants, eighteen teacher-participants self-reported as high implementers of scoring rubrics, thirty-nine as mid-level implementers and eleven as low-level implementers. From this population, twelve subjects were randomly selected (four high, four mid-level, and four lowlevel implementers) by an outside rater for double-blind observations and interviews. Pearson Product Moment correlations of the SRI and the MAI revealed five significant pairings using an alpha level of .05. The statistical results, coupled with the observation and interview findings from the sample-subjects established the consistency and stability of the Scoring Rubrics Inventory. Further, the totality of the results reported here support the research hypothesis of the study: H1: There is a significant correlation between the metacognitive awareness of secondary school core-subject teachers and the successful implementation of scoring rubrics. The results of the study indicated that secondary school core-subject teachers who successfully implement scoring rubrics possess a metacognitive awareness that transcends professional development training. The findings also suggested that teacher-participants who do not implement scoring rubrics either cannot or lack commitment to the innovation. Implications for teacher educators and school leaders indicated the need to: identify those persons who require additional professional development training; include operational strategies and modeling of successful implementation during training; and maintain a consistent training program in scoring rubrics. Recommendations for future research were offered.
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MacElvee, Cameron. "The relationship between the application of scoring rubrics and writing performance." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/289775.

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The purpose of this study was to determine if a relationship exists between the knowledge and application of a writing scoring rubric to writing performance. Participants in a Minority Medical Education Program were given intense instruction in the use of the Medical Colleges Admissions Test Writing Sample scoring rubric. Scores from the participants' pretest and posttest were compared.
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Castle, Courtney. "Measuring Multidimensional Science Learning: Item Design, Scoring, and Psychometric Considerations." Thesis, Boston College, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:107904.

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Thesis advisor: Henry Braun
The Next Generation Science Standards propose a multidimensional model of science learning, comprised of Core Disciplinary Ideas, Science and Engineering Practices, and Crosscutting Concepts (NGSS Lead States, 2013). Accordingly, there is a need for student assessment aligned with the new standards. Creating assessments that validly and reliably measure multidimensional science ability is a challenge for the measurement community (Pellegrino, et al., 2014). Multidimensional assessment tasks may need to go beyond typical item designs of standalone multiple-choice and short-answer items. Furthermore, scoring and modeling of student performance should account for the multidimensionality of the construct. This research contributes to knowledge about best practices for multidimensional science assessment by exploring three areas of interest: 1) item design, 2) scoring rubrics, and 3) measurement models. This study investigated multidimensional scaffolding and response format by comparing alternative item designs on an elementary assessment of matter. Item variations had a different number of item prompts and/or response formats. Observations about student cognition and performance were collected during cognitive interviews and a pilot test. Items were scored using a holistic rubric and a multidimensional rubric, and interrater agreement was examined. Assessment data was scaled with multidimensional scores and holistic scores, using unidimensional and multidimensional Rasch models, and model-data fit was compared. Results showed that scaffolding is associated with more thorough responses, especially among low ability students. Students tended to utilize different cognitive processes to respond to selected-response items and constructed-response items, and were more likely to respond to selected-response arguments. Interrater agreement was highest when the structure of the item aligned with the structure of the scoring rubric. Holistic scores provided similar reliability and precision as multidimensional scores, but item and person fit was poorer. Multidimensional subscales had lower reliability, less precise student estimates than the unidimensional model, and interdimensional correlations were high. However, the multidimensional rubric and model provide nuanced information about student performance and better fit to the response data. Recommendations about optimal combinations of scaffolding, rubric, and measurement models are made for teachers, policymakers, and researchers
Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018
Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education
Discipline: Educational Research, Measurement and Evaluation
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Munro, Yevgenia. "New Tools for Training News Reporters: An interactive Scoring e-Textbook Based on Online Assessment." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/5184.

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This research develops a new approach to the development of training inexperienced journalists in news writing using a web-based platform of instruction delivery. E-training is growing in the world as an instructional setting, and offers not only financial benefits, but also a range of specific advantages over the traditional classroom type of setting. Such advantages include the ability to personalise the content of training to the trainees' current competencies, to facilitate regular multi-faceted monitoring of the changes in these competencies and to combine learning with the immediate practising of what was learned. Two e-training tools have been created and validated in this research: the news text assessment system (NTA) - a comprehensive and effective online scoring rubric, i.e. a matrix describing different levels of competency in several dimensions of the assessed performance - to assess the quality of news writing; and a scoring e-textbook (SET), an asynchronous news writing training tool. The SET is built around the NTA as its core element and contains hundreds of self-learning modules including exercises, examples, instructional texts, and quizzes to be used in a non-linear fashion according to the specific needs of trainees. Both the exercises and the NTA are elements of corrective feedback, which in psychological literature has been shown to be most effective in changing the subsequent performance of trainees. The two tools help both the trainee and the instructor. They assist the instructor to identify and address journalists' weak and absent competencies in news writing and consistently upgrade the learning modules when needed. They help trainees to monitor their progress and to learn from their own mistakes in the short periods of spare time they have during their work or in other time they can spare for the training. To create the NTA, 53 top journalism experts, both practitioners and academics, used the prototype of the assessment rubric with 30 criteria of news writing to assess the quality of several supplied news stories. The results were then subjected to statistical analysis and the NTA rubric was created as a compromise between its comprehensiveness and user-friendliness. To evaluate the NTA and the SET, an experiment was conducted with journalists in one post-Communist country in the form of an action research project, where this researcher was also the instructor. The experiment consisted of four months of training and reflection on its results by both the journalists and the researcher. The results show improvement in news writing competencies to an internationally 'acceptable' news writing standard for most of the trainees. The suggested tools have been well received and the trainees appreciated the interactivity that was provided during the training.
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Vamsi, Appana Vamsi. "Evaluating Industrial Relevance in Search Based Software Engineering Research : A Systematic Mapping Study and Survey." Thesis, Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Institutionen för programvaruteknik, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-14000.

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Search Based Software Engineering is one of the important field of software engineering. Over the past few years even though there is a lot of study performed on SBSE and its search techniques in software development areas, it appears SBSE is not very industry relevant at the moment because most of the academic work was limited towards the application of search techniques. Hence, author proposes a study to know the trend of SBSE literature over the past few years and also analyze to what degree current SBSE research is industry relevant
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Englund, Björn. "Key aspects to consider when designing an IT-tool based on scoring rubrics to support formative assessment: an exploratory design-driven study." Thesis, KTH, Skolan för datavetenskap och kommunikation (CSC), 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-192367.

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Why this thesis is needed. This thesis is motivated by the falling school results of Swedish 15-year-olds, a lack of IT tools in Swedish schools and a call for turning the theory on formative assessment into practice. Previous research that is used in the thesis. This thesis mainly builds on the research done by John Hattie which is presented in his book Visible Learning from 2009, Wiliam & Thompson's research on effective formative assessment from 2007, Pachler et al. research on formative e-assessment from 2010 and Panadero & Jonsson's research on scoring rubrics from 2013. Research question. What key aspects should be taken into consideration when designing and implementing an IT tool based on scoring rubrics which aims to support formative assessment according to the key strategies for effective formative assessment as identified by Wiliam & Thompson (2007)? Method. To answer this question I chose a qualitative approach of parallel paper prototyping where I iteratively exposed the design and my ideas during focus groups to teachers, a headmaster, employees at The Swedish National Agency for Education and high school students, followed by an evaluation of the key topics that surfaced during the focus groups. Results. The results consist of eight key aspects to take into consideration when designing and implementing such a tool. Discussion and future research. Finally I discuss the implications of my findings and present directions for future research which include the construction of the tool, further investigation of the key aspects identified in this study, identification of additional key aspects and more.
Varför denna avhandling behövs. Denna avhandling motiveras av de fallande skolresultaten hos svenska 15-åringar, en brist på IT-verktyg i svenska skolor och ett rop efter att vända forskning inom formativ bedömning till praktik. Tidigare forskning som används. Denna avhandling bygger i huvudsak på forskningen av John Hattie som presenteras i hans bok Visible Learning från 2009, William & Thompsons forskning på effektiv formativ bedömning från 2007, Pachler et al. forskning på formativ e-bedömning från 2010 och Panadero & Jonssons forskning på betygsmatriser från 2013. Forskningsfråga. Vilka nyckelaspekter ska tas i åtanke vid utveckling av ett IT-verktyg baserat på betygsmatriser som stödjer formativ bedömning enligt de fem nyckelstrategierna för effektiv formativ bedömning som formulerats av Wiliam & Thompson (2007)? Metod. För att besvara denna fråga valdes en kvalitativ metod där parallell pappersprototypning användes under ett antal iterationer av fokusgrupper under vilka designen och tidigare diskussionpunkter diskuterades med lärare, en rektor, anställda vid Skolverket samt gymnasiestudenter. Fokusgrupperna följdes upp med en utvärdering av de största diskussionpunkterna som dök upp. Resultat. Resultaten består av åtta nyckelaspekter att ha i åtanke vid utveckling av ett sådant verktyg. Diskussion och framtida forskning. Slutligen diskuteras implikationerna av resultaten och direktioner för framtida forskning framförs. Dessa direktioner inkluderar utveckling av verktyget, vidare utredning av de nyckelaspekter som hittats i denna avhandling, identifikation av ytterligare nyckelaspekter och mer.
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Books on the topic "Scoring rubric"

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Jay, McTighe, ed. Scoring rubrics in the classroom: Using performance criteria for assessing and improving student performance. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Corwin Press, 2001.

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Lloyd, Rosemary. Scoring tools, rubrics and lesson plans.: An Oshawa Area Bertelsmann Project, 1997-98, resource book. [Witby, ON: Durham District School Board], 1998.

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Lloyd, Rosemary. Scoring tools, rubrics and lesson plans.: An Oshawa Area Bertelsmann Project, 1997-98, resource book. [Witby, ON: Durham District School Board], 1998.

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Lloyd, Rosemary. Scoring tools, rubrics and lesson plans.: An Oshawa Area Bertelsmann Project, 1997-98, resource book. [Witby, ON: Durham District School Board], 1998.

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Lloyd, Rosemary. Scoring tools, rubrics and lesson plans.: An Oshawa Area Bertelsmann Project, 1997-98, resource book. [Witby, ON: Durham District School Board], 1998.

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Scoring rubrics. [College Park, MD: ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation, University of Maryland, 2000.

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ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation (Corporate Author) and Carol Boston (Editor), eds. Understanding Scoring Rubrics: A Guide for Teachers. ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment & Evaluation, 2002.

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Teaching Resource - Scoring Rubrics on Transparencies - Level Diamond. Prentice Hall, 2001.

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Riegel, Fernando, Maria da Graça Oliveira Crossetti, and Peter A. Facione. Modelo teórico para mensuração do pensamento crítico holístico no ensino do processo diagnóstico de enfermagem. Brazil Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31012/978-65-5861-321-3.

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The theoretical model book for measuring holistic critical thinking (PCH) in the teaching of the nursing diagnostic process (PDE) highlights the complexity of the PDE based on the application of the PCH of nursing students in face of the requirement of making accurate clinical decisions; in addition, it demonstrates the applicability of the Holistic Critical Thinking Scoring Rubric (HCTSR) instrument authored by professors Peter A. Facione and Noreen Facione; for the assessment of holistic critical thinking in nursing and health, becoming an important diagnostic and formative assessment tool at different levels of education, which can contribute to the advancement of nursing science with regard to the training of critical nurses and reflective in the application of the nursing diagnostic process that is structured in the stages of investigation, interpretation and nursing diagnoses with a view to making accurate nursing decisions. To reach these stages, the nurse must develop skills of holistic critical thinking (PCH), in order to make decisions focused on the best results. Based on this theoretical model, it will be possible to implement different strategies to develop holistic critical thinking in teaching the diagnostic process according to the students' PCH level.
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Writing and Grammar - Communication in Action - Scoring Rubrics on Transparencies. Pearson Education, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Scoring rubric"

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Yamamoto, Megumi, Nobuo Umemura, and Hiroyuki Kawano. "Automated Essay Scoring System Based on Rubric." In Applied Computing & Information Technology, 177–90. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64051-8_11.

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Cushing, Sara T., and Rurik Tywoniw. "Validating a Holistic Rubric for Scoring Short Answer Reading Questions." In Another Generation of Fundamental Considerations in Language Assessment, 113–28. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-8952-2_8.

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VanTassel-Baska, Joyce, and Linda D. Avery. "Rubric for Scoring the Pre- and Postassessments on the Concept of Leadership." In Changing Tomorrow 2 Grades 6-8, 20. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003233619-9.

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VanTassel-Baska, Joyce, and Linda D. Avery. "Rubric for Scoring the Pre- and Postassessments on the Concept of Leadership." In Changing Tomorrow 1 Grade 4-5, 20. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003233602-9.

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van Helvoort, A. A. J. "How Faculty in the Hague University of Applied Sciences Uses the Scoring Rubric for Information Literacy." In Communications in Computer and Information Science, 436–42. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03919-0_58.

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Cox, Troy L., and Randall S. Davies. "From Standards to Rubrics: Comparing Full-Range to At-Level Applications of an Item-Level Scoring Rubric on an Oral Proficiency Assessment." In Pacific Rim Objective Measurement Symposium (PROMS) 2015 Conference Proceedings, 215–38. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1687-5_14.

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Rongchan, Lin. "Rubrics for Scoring, Interpretations and Decision-Making." In Assessment Rubrics Decoded, 46–62. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Assessment in schools: principles in practice: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429022081-5.

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Mohammadi, Mojtaba, and Jaber Kamali. "Designing Scoring Rubrics for Different Writing Tasks: The Case of Resume Writing in Iran." In The Assessment of L2 Written English across the MENA Region, 171–93. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-53254-3_8.

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van Helvoort, J., and H. Joosten. "The Scoring Rubric for Information Literacy as a Tool for Learning." In Pathways into Information Literacy and Communities of Practice, 115–31. Elsevier, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-08-100673-3.00005-8.

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Arter, J. A. "Scoring Rubrics." In International Encyclopedia of Education, 123–39. Elsevier, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-08-044894-7.00262-1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Scoring rubric"

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Murphy, Alexander R., Jacob T. Nelson, Matt R. Bohm, Robert L. Nagel, and Julie S. Linsey. "Question-by-Question Interrater Analysis and Suggestions for Improvements of a Functional Model Scoring Rubric." In ASME 2018 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2018-86074.

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Functional modeling is a tool used for system abstraction. By divorcing system function from component structure, functional modeling allows designers to more easily identify design opportunities and compartmentalize product functions, which can lead to innovation during the ideation process. In this paper, we examine the reliability of a rubric used to evaluate student-generated functional models by comparing interrater reliabilities on a question-by-question basis from a previous study where an examination of the reliability of each question was not assessed. We then suggest changes to the rubric in order to improve the rubric’s overall interrater reliability as well as its question-by-question interrater reliability. These rubric alterations include clarification of vague language, inclusion of examples and counter examples, and a procedure for handling nonexistent functional components as opposed to incorrect or “nonsensical” functional components. This work is in contribution to the ongoing development of this functional modeling rubric as an education instrument. As functional modeling becomes more widely accepted in the design community and in engineering curricula, it is important to have a validated evaluation metric with which to assess student-generated functional models.
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Chen, Binglin, Sushmita Azad, Rajarshi Haldar, Matthew West, and Craig Zilles. "A Validated Scoring Rubric for Explain-in-Plain-English Questions." In SIGCSE '20: The 51st ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3328778.3366879.

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Kwon, Minsung. "PRESERVICE TEACHERS’ SCORING RUBRIC DEVELOPMENT TO ASSESS CONCEPTUAL UNDERSTANDING IN MATHEMATICS." In 12th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation. IATED, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2019.2114.

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Marvaniya, Smit, Swarnadeep Saha, Tejas I. Dhamecha, Peter Foltz, Renuka Sindhgatta, and Bikram Sengupta. "Creating Scoring Rubric from Representative Student Answers for Improved Short Answer Grading." In CIKM '18: The 27th ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3269206.3271755.

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Riggs, Marie, Philip Mountain, Robert L. Nagel, Matt R. Bohm, and Julie S. Linsey. "Knowledge Retention and Scoring Metrics for Functional Modeling in an Engineering Design Context." In ASME 2016 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2016-59640.

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Functional modeling as a design methodology is often covered in engineering design texts as a tool for transforming “customer speak” into “engineering speak.” There is little to no empirical data, though, that clearly demonstrates that learning functional modeling actually improves students’ engineering design skills. The overall objective of this project is to determine the impact of teaching function on engineering students’ design synthesis abilities. This paper focuses on preliminary data collected as a part of the longitudinal study. Students were asked to generate functional models of functionally similar systems at two points during an engineering design course: (1) once as a homework assignment immediately following the introduction of the topic and (2) again as a low stakes in-class activity seven weeks later. This paper will present the comparison of models created at both data points. Student models at each time point are analyzed using a validated 18-question rubric. The results provide promise that, in general, students retain their modeling ability, but there are noted characteristic differences between homework-generated functional models and those generated later in the semester during an in-class activity. These characteristics will be discussed as will potential improvements to the scoring rubric.
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Murphy, Alexander R., Henry D. Banks, Robert L. Nagel, and Julie S. Linsey. "Graduate Students’ Mental Models: An Investigation Into the Role of Function in Systems Understanding." In ASME 2019 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2019-98383.

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Abstract Elicited student mental models reveal students’ understanding of a given system as well as their ability to communicate knowledge of that system to others. Understanding how students form and developmental models of systems is critical to the progress of engineering education. In this work, graduate students’ mental models of common household products are measured before and after instruction on functional modeling and functional decomposition. These mental models are measured using previously published, but still developing mental model instruments. The included systems are a hair dryer, clothes dryer, and vacuum cleaner with accompanying scoring rubrics. Results show statistically significant improvements on average mental model rubric scores on all three given systems after the functional modeling intervention. These results suggest that curriculum content on functional modeling and decomposition likely improves students’ mental models of engineering systems and their ability to communicate their knowledge about those systems. As we improve our understanding of how students form, change, and communicate their mental models of engineering systems, educators can shape curriculum to facilitate the skills necessary for comprehensive systems understanding.
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Rao, D. H., S. R. Mangalwede, and V. B. Deshmukh. "Student performance evaluation model based on scoring rubric tool for network analysis subject using fuzzy logic." In 2017 International Conference on Electrical, Electronics, Communication, Computer, and Optimization Techniques (ICEECCOT). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iceeccot.2017.8284623.

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de Oliveira, Tiago, Denise Stringhini, and Deborah Godoy Martins Correa. "Online Peer Assessment and Scoring Rubric to Produce Better Digital Systems Designs in an Undergraduate Computer Engineering Curriculum." In 2018 XIII Latin American Conference on Learning Technologies (LACLO). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/laclo.2018.00073.

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SIHOMBING, Elsina, Jufrizal JUFRIZAL, and Syafri ANWAR. "Scoring Rubric as the Authentic Assessment Used by the English Teachers to Run the National Curriculum in South Sumatera, Indonesia." In Sixth International Conference on Languages and Arts (ICLA 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icla-17.2018.53.

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Sihombing, Elsina. "The Novelty Of Developing Authentic Assessment On Scoring Rubric For The English Teachers To Run The National Curriculum In South Sumatera, Indonesia." In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference of Global Education and Society Science, ICOGESS 2019,14 March, Medan, North Sumatera, Indonesia. EAI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.14-3-2019.2291985.

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