administration student task rubric student work technical quality
 
Best Place in the United States to Live
Rubric
Contributed by: Kentucky Department of Education (KDE)

SCORING GUIDE
KIRIS Performance Event, Grade 12
1992-93
Task: S/SS1 Best Place in the United States to Live


Unless otherwise noted, score questions for both science and social studies.

Group Activity

Question 1
SCORE DESCRIPTION
4 Student names several factors and describes how and why they are important. Analyses are thorough, insightful, logical, and useful. Analyses must be based on fact rather than emotional attachment to a region.
3 Student generates good description of how and why several factors are important. Response may contain minor inconsistencies or flaws.
2 Student describes how or why some factors are important.
OR
Student describes both but descriptions are sketchy and vague. Response may contain inconsistencies or flaws.
1 Descriptions are weak and vague. Student may give reasons based upon emotional attachment to an area.
0 BLANK

Factors that were provided to students:
  • frequency of severe weather (tornadoes, hurricanes)
  • proximity to active volcano
  • river pollution
  • population density
  • normal average total precipitation
  • biomes
  • earthquake probability

Individual Activity

Question 2
SCORE DESCRIPTION
4 (Does not apply.)
3 Response provides a good description of other meaningful factors that would be useful for evaluation, and may contain minor inconsistencies or flaws.
2 Response provides a fair description of other meaningful factors that would be useful for evaluation and may contain flaws. Response may contain inconsistencies or flaws.
1 Response merely lists other factors, or descriptions are poorly developed, vague, or not meaningful.
0 BLANK


Question 3 - Score for science only.
SCORE DESCRIPTION
4 Student generates a well organized, logical, thoughtful, detailed data table that calculates areas of greatest risk based upon the factors presented in the task,. Map shading is consistent with data table.
3 Student generates a good data table that calculates areas of risk based upon the factors presented in the task. Map is consistent with data table. Response may contain minor inconsistencies or flaws.
2 Student generates an analysis, but organization in data chart may be weak or flawed.
OR
Map is related to analysis or chart or both, but map organization may be weak or flawed.
1 Student may list risks with little or no analysis. Table is illogical, poorly defined, or absent. Map is poorly organized; link with analysis may not be apparent.
0 BLANK


Question 4 - For social studies only.
SCORE DESCRIPTION
4 Student discusses multiple reasons for people continuing to live in danger zones. Answer should include such factors as cultural, environmental, historical, and political reasons.
3 Student discusses some reasons for people continuing to live in danger zones. Reasons are based on limited knowledge of areas. Answer may contain some incorrect information.
2 Student discusses one reason for people continuing to live in danger zones. Reason given is minor. Answer may contain some incorrect information.
1 Student merely lists reason(s) for people continuing to live in danger zones. List may contain reasons of minimal scope.
0 BLANK


Question 5 - Score for science only.
SCORE DESCRIPTION
4 Student gives a clear, concise, detailed, scientifically accurate description of the cause of the one of the following: volcano, hurricane, tornado, polluted river, or earthquake.
3 Student gives a good description of one of the natural disasters; description may lack specific details or contain minor flaws or inconsistencies.
2 Student describes one of the natural disasters; response contains flaws and/or inconsistencies indicating gaps in student's understanding of phenomenon chosen.
1 Student attempts to explain natural disaster but clearly does not comprehend the cause.
0 BLANK


Question 6
SCORE DESCRIPTION
4 Student selects a technological advancement that has allowed people to exist in danger zones and explains the scientific principles involved in the technology. Response indicates understanding of technology and how it has changed people's ability to exist in otherwise dangerous areas. Student's choice of technological advancement is logical, meaningful, and significant.
3 Student selects a technological advancement that has allowed people to exist in danger zones and explains the scientific principles involved in the technology. Response lacks specific detail, or advancement is not particularly significant to humankind, or link between advancement and survival is not concise and clear.
2 Student provides a good description of technology with poor description of scientific principles.
OR
Student provides a poor description of technology with good description of scientific principles involved.
1 Response is sketchy or vague, or contains major flaws. Response indicates lack of understanding if issues. Choice of technology may be trivial or inappropriate.
0 BLANK


 


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