Hello all:

I’d like build a catalogue or inventory of assessment (grading) rubrics for 
Wikipedia assignments, ranging from the simplest assignments to the most 
complex. I’m not referring to a grading structure (10% for this, 50% for that, 
etc.), but to a set of objective criteria for assessing the contributions 
within that structure. Usually, this will be in a two-dimensional format with 
“descriptors” that assess proficiency in various “dimensions” (see 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubric_(academic)), though other formats are 
possible. I’ve reviewed various materials, including the WikiEdu grading page 
(http://ask.wikiedu.org/questions/scope:all/sort:activity-desc/tags:grading/page:1/)
 and found some useful guidance at pages 14-19 of the Case Studies document. 
But I’d like to see if any of this has been translated into the kinds of 
rubrics I’m thinking of. I’m open to seeing what you’ve done in any discipline, 
even if it doesn’t follow the format I’m describing.

Apologies for any duplication between this list and the education-request list.

John Kleefeld
Associate Professor, College of Law
University of Saskatchewan
15 Campus Drive
Saskatoon SK  S7N 5A6

tel:          (+1) 306.966.1039
email:    [email protected]
skype:    johnkleefeld
twitter: @johnkleefeld
web:       http://law.usask.ca/find-people/faculty/kleefeld-john.php

Read my most recent article, co-authored with former student Kate Rattray, on 
editing Wikipedia for law school credit: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2729241.

Also, just published—“Contributory Fault at 90,” my book chapter in Quill & 
Friel’s Damages and Compensation Culture: 
http://www.bloomsbury.com/au/damages-and-compensation-culture-9781849467971.


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