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Summer Reading Response Rubric for all books. 
     Don’t forget to  also have at least 10 new vocab words and their definitions. | |||||
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CATEGORY | 
4 | 
3 | 
2 | 
1 | |
| 
Introduction (Organization) | 
The introduction is inviting, states the main  topic and previews the structure of the paper. | 
The introduction clearly states the main topic and  previews the structure of the paper, but is not particularly inviting to the  reader. | 
The introduction states the main topic, but does  not adequately preview the structure of the paper nor is it particularly  inviting to the reader. | 
There is no clear introduction of the main topic  or structure of the paper. | |
| 
Focus on Topic (Content) | 
There is one clear, well-focused topic. Main idea  stands out and is supported by detailed information. | 
Main idea is clear but the supporting information  is general. | 
Main idea is somewhat clear but there is a need  for more supporting information. | 
The main idea is not clear. There is a seemingly  random collection of information. | |
| 
Support for Topic (Content) | 
Relevant, telling, quality details give the reader  important information that goes beyond the obvious or predictable. | 
Supporting details and information are relevant,  but one key issue or portion of the storyline is unsupported. | 
Supporting details and information are relevant,  but several key issues or portions of the storyline are unsupported. | 
Supporting details and information are typically  unclear or not related to the topic. | |
| 
Adding Personality (Voice) | 
The writer seems to be writing from knowledge or  experience. The author has taken the ideas and made them \"his  own.\" | 
The writer seems to be drawing on knowledge or  experience, but there is some lack of ownership of the topic. | 
The writer relates some of his own knowledge or  experience, but it adds nothing to the discussion of the topic. | 
The writer has not tried to transform the  information in a personal way. The ideas and the way they are expressed seem  to belong to someone else. | |
| 
Conclusion (Organization) | 
The conclusion is strong and leaves the reader  with a feeling that they understand what the writer is \"getting  at.\" | 
The conclusion is recognizable and ties up almost  all the loose ends. | 
The conclusion is recognizable, but does not tie  up several loose ends. | 
There is no clear conclusion, the paper just ends. | |
| 
Capitalization & Punctuation (Conventions) | 
Writer makes no errors in capitalization or  punctuation, so the paper is exceptionally easy to read. | 
Writer makes 1 or 2 errors in capitalization or  punctuation, but the paper is still easy to read. | 
Writer makes a few errors in capitalization and/or  punctuation that catch the reader\'s attention and interrupt the flow. | 
Writer makes several errors in capitalization  and/or punctuation that catch the reader\'s attention and greatly interrupt  the flow. | |
| 
Accuracy of Facts (Content) | 
All supportive facts are reported accurately. | 
Almost all supportive facts are reported  accurately. | 
Most supportive facts are reported accurately. | 
NO facts are reported OR most are inaccurately reported. | |
The purpose of this blog is to stay connected to what's going on in class, practice writing, and actively learning.
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Summer Reading Responses - Rubric
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