What is an iRubric?

What is an iRubric?

iRubric is a comprehensive rubric development, assessment, and sharing tool. Designed from the ground up, iRubric supports a variety of applications in an easy-to-use package. Best of all, iRubric is free to build and share.

Is RCampus free?

RCampus Pricing Overview There is a free version. RCampus does not offer a free trial.

What is a rubric use for?

A rubric is an explicit set of criteria used for assessing a particular type of work or performance (TLT Group, n.d.) and provides more details than a single grade or mark. Rubrics, therefore, will help you grade more objectively.

What does rubric score mean?

In US education terminology, rubric is “a scoring guide used to evaluate the quality of students’ constructed responses”. A scoring rubric is an attempt to communicate expectations of quality around a task. In many cases, scoring rubrics are used to delineate consistent criteria for grading.

Where can I get rubrics?

Online free rubric makers

  • Annenberg Learner (custom)
  • iRubric (custom)
  • Essay Tagger (Common Core)
  • RubiStar (customizable templates)
  • Teachnology (premade and customized)
  • Schrockguide (Common Core)
  • ThemeSpark (Common Core)
  • PBL Checklist (project based learning)

How do you write a rubric?

How to Create a Rubric in 6 Steps

  1. Step 1: Define Your Goal.
  2. Step 2: Choose a Rubric Type.
  3. Step 3: Determine Your Criteria.
  4. Step 4: Create Your Performance Levels.
  5. Step 5: Write Descriptors for Each Level of Your Rubric.

How do you do rubrics?

How to Develop a Rubric:

  1. Determine the type of rubric you wish to use – holistic or analytic (Carriveau, 2010).
  2. Identify what you want to assess.
  3. Identify the characteristics to be rated (rows)
  4. Identify the levels of mastery/scale (columns).
  5. Describe each level of mastery for each characteristic (cells).

How do I score a rubric?

How to Turn Rubric Scores into Grades

  1. Step 1: Define the Criteria.
  2. Step 2: Distribute the Points.
  3. Step 3: Share the Rubric with Students Ahead of Time.
  4. Step 4: Score Samples.
  5. Step 5: Assess Student Work (Round 1)
  6. Step 6: Assess Student Work (Round 2)
  7. Q&A About this Process.
  8. Need Ready-Made Rubrics?

How do I create a rubric?

Designing Grading Rubrics

  1. Define the purpose of the assignment/assessment for which you are creating a rubric.
  2. Decide what kind of rubric you will use: a holistic rubric or an analytic rubric?
  3. Define the criteria.
  4. Design the rating scale.
  5. Write descriptions for each level of the rating scale.
  6. Create your rubric.

How do I create a rubric online?

Online free rubric makers

  1. Annenberg Learner (custom)
  2. iRubric (custom)
  3. Essay Tagger (Common Core)
  4. RubiStar (customizable templates)
  5. Teachnology (premade and customized)
  6. Schrockguide (Common Core)
  7. ThemeSpark (Common Core)
  8. PBL Checklist (project based learning)