Sunday, November 10, 2013

11.7 Criteria for grades, what to work on for the short analysis

NOTEBring your signed consent forms to class!   You must turn in your consent form so you can begin colleting data.

Also: turn in your short analysis projects as an attachment sent to the course email.

Grade
We spent the first part of class reviewing how you will be graded for this course
Your syllabus (posted to the right) lists the following spread of points for the course.

1.  Blog + comments (response to readings; practice analysis, drafts, reflections, etc)         250 points            
2.  Class presentations + group work + participation + homework                                          150 points
3.  Short analysis project                                                                                            100 points
4.  Research project                                                                                                                 500 points
  • 200 points = Writing for project planning, creation of  data collection tools, presentation and preliminary analysis of data
  • 150 points=evidence of writing process including invention writing, successive drafts, and writing to critique and plan revisions to successive drafts
  • 150= final research essay
Total points for course                                                                                                                        1000 points

As noted on they syllabus, we may re-negotiate how points are assigned for your research project, as a class.
In tonight's class we talked in some more detail about exactly how grades would be calculated.

For blogs, you receive 10 points per post.  We will probably have more than 25 posts, so you have a possibility of 10 points extra credit.

 For class presentations, group work, participation and homework, you earn 10 points per class (again,there may be more classes than 15 so there is a chance for extra credit).

 For the short analysis project, and the research essay, the discussion on the syllabus says we will develop specific criteria in class (see below).

Criteria for writing to develop the project and for evidence of the writing process are listed on the Research project assignment sheet.  Also, as we finish the term, you will have a series of blog posts where you will receive feedback on what you need to do to meet these requirements.

Grades for the course are assigned in keeping with the following scale:
91 and above = A, with 90% = A-
81 and above = B, with 80% = B-
71 and above = C, with 70% = C-
This means that to pass this course you will need to earn 701 points or above (out of the 1000 possible).

Criteria for Short Analysis project
We listed the criteria for the project on the board and had a discussion about how to "weight" the different features so they will add up to the total score, and so that the "value" or importance of each criterium corresponds to the number of points it is assigned.

I pointed out that in practice, assigning a grades is more whollistic, since the effectiveness of one component shapes and is dependent on the effectiveness of other components.  At the same time, our work to assign points to each feature can give students a realistic picture of what they need to work on and the relative importance (for their grade) of the different features of their composition.

We first assigned a "range" of scores for each component, and then "tweaked" our ranges so that the total score came out to 100 points (the total allocated to the project).  Our scoring was as follows.

20   quality of the research question
20   developed categories of analysis relevant to the data and to the research question
20   relevant, effective examples to demonstrate what the categories show with respect to the research question
10   clear, direct statements of what the examples show with respect to the research question
10   clear, logical organization appropriate for writing studies research esays
10   conclusion  sums up findings and reflects on limitations of the analysis and/or further possibilities for study
10    grammar/readability

We then tested our rubric on one of the sample essays. Our scores were in the same general "ballpark" - which suggests that we all had a similar understanding for the expectations for the essay. 

In general, my score was more demanding for the research question, the use of direct statements, the organization (because organization includes not just the order, but the details of what each section accomplishes), and the conclusion than most of the groups, and I was more satisfied with the essay's development of categories, its use of examples and the grammar than most other groups.  This is important for you to notice because I am the "audience" for your essays, the person who will be evaluating them, and you need to be aware of my expectations.  The rubric is about providing you with a basis for thinking about what you need to work on, and for estimating how well you are doing.  As noted above, grade assignments are somewhat more wholistci.


For next class:
Blog 18:  Post some reflective writing on your Short Analysis essay.  Use the rubric to estimate how well you did and what you need to work on.

Due: Final Short Analysis project.  If you are stumped, let me know so we can set up a conference.  I am not available for conferences on Friday.  I am in my office most of the day Wednesday and Thursday. 

Due: Signed consent forms (if possible).

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