Assessing with a Rubric

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026
Grade Level
Unit Lesson Body

Assessing with an Explanatory Rubric

A test grader will use a rubric to score your on-demand writing. A rubric lists the features the grader is looking for at different levels of performance. If you understand the kinds of rubrics that graders use, you will better understand how to write responses that score well. In this lesson, you will see rubrics for explanatory and narrative writing, based on rubrics used for the Common Core State Standards.

Assess with an explanatory rubric.

Use the following rubric to score a literary analysis for assessment.

Assessment Rubric

Assessing with a Narrative Rubric

Assess with a narrative rubric.

Use the following rubric to score a story for assessment.

Assessment Rubric
Templates
Template Name
Assess with an Explanatory Rubric
Template Content

Student:

Date:

Assess with an explanatory rubric.

Use the following rubric to score a literary analysis for assessment.

Score

Focus

Organization

Evidence

Language

Conventions

4

A consistent and purposeful focus and a strong controlling idea make the writing very informative:

• is focused, clear, and well supported

• places the controlling idea in a solid context

An effective beginning, middle, and ending create completeness and unity:

• strongly connects ideas using transitions

• presents ideas in a logical progression throughout

• connects to the reader in the beginning and achieves the purpose by the ending

Thorough support for the controlling idea includes a variety of details from various sources:

• has complete, relevant, and well integrated support, giving credit to sources

• elaborates ideas effectively

Precise language makes the writing clear and effective:

• has appropriate vocabulary for the subject, audience, and purpose

A strong command of conventions makes the writing polished and clear:

• uses words well and forms sentences correctly

• has correct punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and grammar

3

An adequate, general focus with a controlling idea makes the writing informative:

• is mostly maintained, but with some loosely related material

• provides adequate context for the controlling idea

A beginning, a middle, and an ending exist, making the writing complete, though some material may be loosely related:

• connects ideas with some transitions

• progresses through ideas

• adequately introduces ideas in the beginning, and adequately sums them up in the ending

Support for the controlling idea includes details from different sources:

• uses some support from sources, with general or imprecise credit

• elaborates on some ideas

Some precise and some general language adequately communicates

• has generally appropriate vocabulary for the subject, audience, and purpose

Adequate command of conventions makes the writing solid:

• has occasional usage or sentence errors, but they do not disrupt meaning

• has adequate punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and grammar

2

A somewhat focused controlling idea is supported, with minor divergence from the topic:

• receives some support, but not enough

• may be somewhat unclear or unfocused

An inconsistent structure and obvious flaws make the writing uneven:

• has inconsistent transitions

• progresses unevenly through ideas from beginning to ending

• has a weak beginning or ending

Support for the controlling idea is uneven, needing more details from different sources:

• has little support from sources, with unclear or missing credit

• elaborates on few ideas

Simplistic vocabulary unevenly expresses ideas:

• has vocabulary that is sometimes inappropriate for the subject, audience, and purpose

Uneven use of conventions makes the writing somewhat difficult to read:

• has frequent usage and sentence errors, which can obscure meaning

• does not consistently use punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and grammar

1

Little or no focus makes the writing uninformative:

• might be brief

• might have major divergence from the topic

• might be confusing or ambiguous in focus

Little or no structure exists, making the writing incomplete or confused:

• uses few transitions

• has off-topic ideas

Few or no details from sources support the controlling idea:

• includes little or no support from source material, with no credit

• does not elaborate on ideas

Vague, unclear vocabulary creates confusion:

• has limited vocabulary that does not connect to subject, audience, or purpose

Incorrect conventions make the writing difficult to read:

• makes many errors, which often obscure meaning

0

A category receives no credit when performance falls below the level indicated in row 1.

Template Name
Assess with a Narrative Rubric
Template Content

Student:

Date:

Assess with a narrative rubric.

Use the following rubric to score a story for assessment.

Score

Focus

Organization

Evidence

Language

Conventions

4

The entire narrative* is clearly focused and well maintained:

• establishes a clear setting

• includes well drawn characters

• uses a strong narrator with a clear point of view**

An effective plot creates unity and completeness:

• uses a variety of effective transitional strategies

• sequences events logically from beginning to ending

• includes a beginning and an ending that connect to the audience and achieve the purpose

Description, dialogue, and details fully and effectively elaborate the narrative:

• uses various narrative techniques to vividly bring the experience to life

The language effectively expresses the experience:

• uses sensory, concrete, and figurative language to effectively achieve the narrative’s purpose

Strong adherence to conventions makes the narrative clear:

• effectively forms sentences

• has correct usage

• uses correct punctuation, capitalization, and spelling

3

The narrative* is mostly focused and generally maintained:

• establishes a setting

• includes characters

• has a narrator with a point of view**

A plot helps create a sense of unity and completeness, though some parts may be loosely connected or flawed:

• uses a variety of adequate transitional strategies

• sequences events adequately from beginning to ending

• includes a beginning and an ending that relate to audience and purpose

Description, dialogue, and details adequately elaborate the narrative:

• includes an assortment of narrative techniques that generally give life to the story

The language adequately expresses the experience:

• has sensory, concrete, and figurative language that adequately advance the narrative’s purpose

The narrative adequately adheres to conventions:

• forms most sentences correctly

• has generally correct usage

• has adequate punctuation, capitalization, and spelling

2

The narrative* is somewhat focused and maintained, with some divergence:

• has an inconsistent setting

• has little characterization

• has an inconsistent narrator and point of view**

An inconsistent plot makes for some obvious flaws:

• uses a few basic transitional strategies

• sequences events unevenly from beginning to ending

• includes a beginning and an ending

• has weak connection among ideas

Partial descriptions, uneven dialogue, and scant details provide cursory elaboration:

• uses uneven and inconsistent narrative techniques

The language unevenly expresses the experience:

• includes uneven sensory, concrete, or figurative language, which partially advance the purpose

A number of conventions errors mar the narrative:

• forms sentences unevenly

• includes usage errors that impede understanding

• has inconsistent punctuation, capitalization, and spelling

1

The narrative* has little focus and is poorly maintained:

• is confusing, ambiguous, and brief

• has no clear characters

• has no narrator

• has considerable divergence

Little or no plot is discernible:

• uses few or no transitional strategies

• contains no clear sequence

• has no beginning or ending

• has jumbled ideas

Little or no description, dialogue, or details leave the narrative unelaborated:

• includes few if any narrative techniques that advance the story

Vague, confusing language makes the experience confusing:

• has little or no sensory, concrete, or figurative language, leaving the purpose unrealized

Numerous conventions errors make the narrative confusing:

• has frequent, severe conventions errors that obscure meaning

0

A category receives no credit when performance falls below the level indicated in row 1.

* Narratives can be real or imagined.

** Use of point of view begins in 7th grade.

Lesson Weight
5