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The Fault Line
Examples of Student Work
Contributed by: California Systemic Initiative Assessment (CSIA)


There is one example for each score point ranging from 4 down to 1. Explanations of the scores were written by staff from the California Systemic Initaitive Assessment Collaborative (C.S.I.A.C.) who conducted training and scoring of field tested events.

Question 1 - Event Score = 4



Component
Score
Commentary
Question 1
(4)
Descriptions of the lab activity are specific, detailed, and correct. Response connects plate motion to the upward movement of the sand to create a mound or ridge. "When you slid one plate under the other plate that caused the sand to pile up. The upward movement caused a mountain on the fault line."



Question 2 - Event Score = 4



Component
Score
Commentary
Question 2
(4)
Descriptions of movement of plates toward one another (producing compression features) are specific and detailed. Response includes plate movement and subduction. Includes plate movement toward each other with mountains built along the plate boundaries--"The excess rock gets pushed up and forms a hill mountain along the fault line. When 1 plate is shoved under another, the land is pushed up resulting in a ridge."



Question 3 - Event Score = 4

Look at the map below. The mountains in the Pinnacles National Monument and the mountains at Tejon Pass were once located next to each other and were part of the same mountain range. Now they are separated by over 240 kilometers (km).



Component
Score
Commentary
Question 3
(4)
Description of movements of plates as they slide past one another are specific and detailed. Indicates that mountains were once together--"the fault line could've separated them. When an earthquake happened it probably moved them apart a little by plate movement over a period of time." Indicates direction and reference to activity--"Just like our sand experiment, the plates had to move in order for the mountains to be the way they are.

 

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