| Screening:
T, 12:30-3:20
Class:
Th, 12:30-2:20
 Room:
CMU 120
 Instructor
Kimberlee
Gillis-Bridges
 Padelford
A-305
 543-4892
 Hours
TTh
 10:30-12:00
 and by
appointment
 Last Updated:
2/28/02
Comments
or queries
 |   Essay #2 Grading
Rubric
 An A-Range (3.5-4.0)
Essay
 
A B-Range (2.5-3.4)
Essay
Has a substantive thesis
and essay fully addresses the topic; the thesis is defendable, clearly
explained, and supported in the body of the essay
Shows substantial depth,
fullness and complexity of thought
Expresses ideas clearly
and commands the reader’s attention 
Demonstrates clear, unified
and coherent organization 
Is fully developed and
detailed with arguments supported by persuasive reasoning and references
to films under study;  there is an appropriate balance between providing
evidence and analyzing that evidence
Has a sophisticated style
(remarkable variety of sentence pattern, smooth transitions between ideas,
superior control of diction) 
Properly cites source material
Has few, if any, minor
errors in grammar, usage or mechanics 
 
A C-Range (1.5-2.4)
Essay
Has a clear thesis that
addresses the topic, but thesis may not address more significant aspects
of the topic; the thesis may be clear and well-argued, but could use additional
support; the essay may introduce points not expressed in the thesis; or
the thesis may be discernible but not focused, with the essay addressing
more aspects of the films than can be adequately explored within the page
limit
Shows some depth and complexity
of thought 
Expresses ideas clearly 
Demonstrates effective
organization 
Is well developed with
sensible reasoning and appropriate references to films; however, some evidence
may detract from the thesis and some ideas might not be fully explored
Demonstrates balance between
evidence and analysis for the most part, but balance may be weak in places 
Has an effective style
(some variety of sentence patterns, transitions between ideas, accurate
diction) 
Properly cites source material,
but may have errors in citation format
Has few errors in grammar,
usage or mechanics 
 
A D-Range (.7-1.4) Essay
Has a thesis that may not
be entirely clear and essay does not fully analyze the films and topic;
essay may mention many points and analyze few 
Shows insufficient awareness
of the complexity of issues addressed; may treat the films simplistically
or repetitively 
Communicates ideas clearly
for the most part, but may have some lapses in clarity 
Has a recognizable organizational
pattern, but the relation among parts is not consistently clear enough
to provide a coherent focus 
Is unevenly developed;
writer may offer sufficient reasoning or references to films for some of
the ideas but not for others 
Demonstrates some balance
between evidence and analysis 
Has an adequate style (limited
variation in sentence patterns, transitions between most ideas, diction
accurate for the most part) 
Cites the majority of source
material, but occasionally material may be clearly cited but not referenced
in parentheses
Has some errors in grammar,
usage or mechanics, but demonstrates basic control of these areas  
An F (0.0) Essay
Has an unclear thesis;
essay describes the films' elements and meets basic length requirements,
but does not analyze the films or treat the topic in any meaningful fashion 
Lacks focus or demonstrates
confused, stereotyped or simplistic thinking; writer may demonstrate no
overall conception of the issues raised by the films 
May not communicate ideas
clearly 
Is ineffectively organized,
with no clear relationship between the parts of the essay 
May not provide adequate
or appropriate reasoning or references to support generalizations, or may
provide details without generalizations 
Demonstrates little relationship
between evidence and the thesis
Has stylistic weaknesses
(no variety of sentence patterns, few transitions, imprecise diction) 
Indicates use of source
material, but does not have consistent parenthetical references
Has occasional major errors
in grammar, usage or mechanics or frequent minor  errors that interfere
in the reader's understanding of the essay  
Has no thesis or has an
incomprehensible thesis 
May be deliberately off-topic
and demonstrate no understanding of the issues addressed by the films 
Does not communicate ideas
clearly 
Lacks coherent organization 
Shows no development of
ideas; may simply summarize films 
Has an incoherent style
(difficulties with sentence structure, pattern of diction errors) 
Presents another writer’s
work as the author’s own
Has pervasive pattern of
errors in grammar, usage and mechanics that renders the essay unreadable 
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