Santa Ana College Takes Grading Online
- By Linda L. Briggs
- 06/06/07
A free product that helps make writing assignments less subjective and more understandable to students is saving
Santa Ana College Professor John Howe huge amounts of time and helping him grade writing assignments much more consistently.
Howe teaches marketing, advertising, and business management courses at
Santa Ana College, a community college outside Los Angeles. He said he
uses a range of products from Reazon Systems Inc., including one
called
Rubric--online software that lets him create very specific
performance-based objectives for each writing assignment he makes.
"What [Rubric] does for students is just marvelous," Howe said.
"There's no more hidden agenda. When you make an assignment, they know
exactly what I'm looking for when I grade."
Rubric works, Howe said, because most writing assignments tend to be
highly subjective. Instructors may know exactly what they want, but
communicating that to students can be challenging. And students often
have detailed questions on how grading will be handled.
Rubric addresses those issues by having the instructor specify exactly
what is required for each portion of a paper and how that part will be
weighted as part of the assignment's overall grade. "You can break the
entire assignment down into sections [that specify] what you're looking
for in that section, and how you're going to grade it," How explained.
"When you actually do grade it, ... [the students] can see exactly what
you graded them on."
Grading writing assignments can be a time-consuming process. Rubric
greatly speeds up the grading process, Howe said, which saves him
"enormous" amounts of time and helps him turn papers around more
quickly. Rubric makes grading easier because as he works his way
through each paper, "I just click on the box under each one of these,"
Howe said, enter the number earned, "and it does all the math for me."
That frees up time that allows him to focus more on how students are
doing, Howe said. "I communicate so much better with the students now
on how they're doing."
In addition, the program allows him to break down how the entire class
has performed on a writing assignment, by section. He can then
highlight areas that a majority of students performed poorly on, which
tells him to spend additional lecture time on that topic.
The Rubric product has a healthy future, Howe said, as community
colleges in California are beginning to be asked by the state
legislature to measure student learning outcomes more specifically by
curriculum--something public schools have been required to do for some
time. A tool like Rubric helps instructors to set and then measure
performance-based objectives because it evaluates student performance
far more objectively than an instructor can do alone in grading a
writing assignment. It also records performance information, and can be
used repeatedly for the same course, thus collecting specific data over
time on performance against set objectives.
"The beauty of the Rubric program is that is really does create
performance-based objectives," Howe said, "because it lets you know
exactly what you will be graded on."
The future of the Rubric program, Howe predicts, is for managers in the
workplace who need to measure performance as objectively as possible.
The online product is free for those who register and agree to share their Rubrics with others, so Howe, who has
his own website, isn't paying anything to use the product.
He's also benefiting from the Rubrics created by other instructors
worldwide. Sharing Rubrics with other instructors is helpful, because
the up-front work in creating them can be challenging, Howe admits.
Although most instructors have a basic idea in mind of their
expectations for a particular assignment, Rubric forces them to be more
specific. "You have to sit down and think it through and write it down,
and that's not easy to do," Howe said. Seeing what others have done in
the same subject area makes it far easier. At the very least, sharing
Rubrics can help instructors with the initial objectives for an
assignment.
The publicly shared Rubrics are categorized by subject matter, such as
chemistry or English. Howe said they offer "a great learning experience
for all of us… You can go in there and see how other people are grading
the assignments they're making, and what the criteria are."
For example, Howe's rubric on a management case project, which can be
viewed here, specifies:
The student will develop a performance problem case that he
or she is currently experiencing. Once the performance problem
situation is properly defined, the student will then apply the subject
matter learned in class to create a plan of action to deal with the
performance problem. The case is based on 100 [percent] which will
convert to 100 points.
The assignment then goes on to
specify exactly what's required in each of seven sections, how each
will be graded (from "not acceptable" through "poor," "fair," and
"good") and how many points will be awarded per section.
"The students love it, because they know exactly what's expected of
them," How said. "It's not a guessing game.... [They know that] this is
what I'm going to hold your toes to the fire for."
About the Author
Linda Briggs is a freelance writer based in San Diego, Calif. She can be reached at [email protected].