tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4250050147042236415.post2881127062307124325..comments2023-08-28T08:55:26.996-07:00Comments on Don't Panic, The Answer is 42: Teaching ComaUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4250050147042236415.post-35526931534599150712012-08-11T08:46:53.585-07:002012-08-11T08:46:53.585-07:00I've never seen anything like it either. It...I've never seen anything like it either. It's my new principal's idea but all she gave me to work with was that she wanted all her teachers to have rubrics describing the topics students would be learning this year. The rest is my take on her assignment. I haven't used standard based grading before mostly because Oregon standards were such a mess and have been changing every year. Maybe now they're on common core it would be easier to try, but I am liking the idea of a rubric like this one. Students can see their learning. It's a really visual way for students to track their progress and also for students to develop their own organizational framework to place new knowledge into. I think students need to see where they're headed, how far they've come and they need to see how it's all linked together. We'll see how it works out.Lizzy-Senseihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16697599110257655917noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4250050147042236415.post-44953978027514168722012-08-10T14:52:31.530-07:002012-08-10T14:52:31.530-07:00I'd be curious if this helps motivate students...I'd be curious if this helps motivate students - I've never seen anything quite like it in terms of scale (a rubric for an entire year long course). I'm guessing you use standards-based grades? I love the title of your blog as a Hitchiker's fan by the way.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com