What makes a quality rubric, and how do we know? Do you have a consistent approach, and does it center equity? What does that even mean? And hey, does your instructional team have a clear and calibrated practice for rubric design? Does your school offer guidance for this critical feature of learning and assessment models? In this workshop, we’ll dig into the key design principles and methods for learner-centered rubric design that disrupt some of the features of the most dominant approaches in the field: proficiency scales, deficit language, evaluation-focused rubrics, performance indicators that lack clarity, coherent progression, and/or are embedded with bias in their design or use. First: Rethink your rubric design by analyzing its purpose, features, language, and underlying assumptions. Next: Partner up with others to examine and critique sample rubrics from the field, using a set of learner-centered design principles. Finally: Redesign your own rubric with an equity lens by learning and applying a set of learner-centered design principles and tools that support competency development, connectedness, and criticality. Reflect on the experience, synthesize your new learning, and celebrate your good work. Bring tools and resources home to support others in the work.
Online Streaming
Job Role Applicability:
- Curriculum Director / Coordinator
- Director of Professional Development
- Chinese Language Teacher
- Drama Teacher
- English/Language Arts Teacher
- Humanities Teacher
- Teacher Librarian
- Mathematics Teacher
- Science / STEAM Teacher
- Social Studies Teacher
- Primary Teacher
- Early Childhood Teacher
- Physical Education Teacher
- Modern Foreign Language
- Design & Technology
- Maker Education
- 21st Century Skills
- Literacy
- Numeracy
- Social Studies
- Science
- Visual Arts
- Performing Arts
- Humanities
- Music
- Design & Technology
- Chinese
- Chinese Language Teaching
- Health & Physical Education
- Personalized Learning
- Professional Learning
- Social Emotional Learning
Keynote
- Lower Elementary [Age 4 - 6]
- Upper Elementary [Age 8 - 10]
- Middle School [Age 11 - 13]
- High School [Age 14 - 17]
- Higher Education [Age 18+]