Rethinking Rubrics
" While numbers work pretty well for communicating certain kinds of precise information, we have kept words around for their evocative, emotive, associative power. Increased pressure to standardize our reactions to words violates their nature." (Wilson, 2007, pg. 63) As I was reading the articles for this week, I kept recalling how we've talked a lot about how teachers might have a more subjective view of the students in their class when we think in terms of discipline. We've learned how this holds many barriers for students in the classroom and how this can be problematic at times. But if we think of subjectivity in terms of assessment, rubrics have a way of forcing teachers to think too objectively . This seems to say to students, don't be outspoken and opinionated in a classroom setting, but make sure you bring it in your next essay. Anyone else think they are getting mixed messages here? "Rubrics were developed to make direct writing assess...