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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

Title Image--Grading

Essay #2 Grading Rubric

An A-Range (3.5-4.0) 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 B-Range (2.5-3.4) 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 C-Range (1.5-2.4) 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 
A D-Range (.7-1.4) 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 
An F (0.0) 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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