When I had you for ____, you graded our assessments using a form of standards based grading. I remember receiving a paper back that listed what standards I had mastered and which ones I still needed to work on. I have wanted to try using a standards based grading system ever since I saw it in your classroom. Would you have any resources that you would be willing to share with me?My colleague replied with several tips and resources, including Matt Townsley's growing list of scholarly articles SBG. He also Cc'd me, and while I was drafting my own response I realized it might be better to write it as a blog post. So here it is, for what it's worth: my list of suggestions and resources for getting started with SBG in the math classroom.
Showing posts with label rubric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rubric. Show all posts
Friday, June 23, 2017
Advice for Getting Started with SBG
One of our teacher ed grads emailed one of my colleagues in search of SBG resources for a pre-algebra course he's developing for next year. He wrote:
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Those Less Convincing Performances
I recently completed my second semester of standards-based grading. I have learned a lot, and will try to post more about that this semester.
After a conversation with a colleague, Pam Wells, about the SBG system I'd been using. The conversation got me thinking about how to handle the, shall we say, less convincing performances.
Email to Pam on the matter:

Email to Pam on the matter:
Pam, I appreciated the opportunity to talk with you about SBG on Friday. Since then, my thought keep returning to the rubric and the question of what a “1” means. I think I will change how I use 1’s in the future.When we talked, we agreed that 1 basically means “you don’t get this yet.” In that sense, a 1 should not count as evidence of proficiency at all. So a 1 and an 0 are similar: they mean “no evidence provided”, but for different reasons. Anything at a 0 or 1 simply does not count as a piece of evidence for that target. If we require two pieces of evidence for each target, this reinforces the mastery mode of grading implicit in SBG. If you don’t get to two pieces of evidence, the grade is reduced.
Monday, September 9, 2013
I'm not grading this
I asked my students to turn in a draft of the Cheesecake Task last week. But when I sat down this weekend to prepare to write feedback on their tasks, I hit a snag. Simply put, the work was not good, but their self-evaluations were off the charts high. How could this be?
Before I started inking comments, I decided to sort the stack into two piles:
Pile one: Almost got it, needs minimal feedback.
Pile two: Needs a lot of work (and lots of feedback).
Pile one had 5 papers in it. Pile two had 19.
Ugh.
Before I started inking comments, I decided to sort the stack into two piles:
Pile one: Almost got it, needs minimal feedback.
Pile two: Needs a lot of work (and lots of feedback).
Pile one had 5 papers in it. Pile two had 19.
Ugh.
Friday, July 19, 2013
...why rubrics? (part 1)
Why I use rubrics, #1: Rubrics help me to focus on proficiencies, not deficits, and they support my efforts to give feedback that can be used to improve future performances.
In earlier posts, I discussed the "In the cups" performance task and my use of a proficiency-based assessment system in my intermediate algebra course. In this post, I'll share an example to illustrate how the use of an evidence-based rubric has supported my implementation.
In earlier posts, I discussed the "In the cups" performance task and my use of a proficiency-based assessment system in my intermediate algebra course. In this post, I'll share an example to illustrate how the use of an evidence-based rubric has supported my implementation.
Show me what you can do
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