Understanding Rubrics
I am writing this article about rubrics for parents.
- Your child's first couple of years in school will probably be an exciting time of exploration and discovery.
 - Then, along come the middle and high school years when serious academic assessment begins to rear its ugly head.
 - Finally, that day comes when your child comes home all upset because she got a C on a paragraph her class had to write on the prompt "Stuff that makes me laugh."
 - Suddenly, academic assessment is staring you and your child in the face. Both of you wonder why her teacher gave her a C.
 
Now, let's understand something fundamental to assessment.
- Your teachers are not trying to humiliate or demean you. They are merely trying to determine your child's skill sets.
 - We adults have endured performance reviews during the course of our careers. Those are other forms of assessment.
 - Teachers, by and large, don't grade subjectively. They look at a set of criteria that they apply uniformly to every student's work.
 - Those criteria are called rubrics.
 

So, let's dig in and find out how they work. As we look at the various components that can make up rubrics, I have included an authoritative source from one of the many education schools in the nation. Use these sources to learn more about a specific rubric component that interests you.
Fundamental Principles
