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iRubric: AH225 Scheduled Homework III rubric

iRubric: AH225 Scheduled Homework III rubric

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AH225 Scheduled Homework III 
Mandatory – due Oct. 6 in class and on workspaces
Rubric Code: Q32747
Ready to use
Public Rubric
Subject: Humanities  
Type: Assignment  
Grade Levels: Undergraduate

Powered by iRubric Homework I
5 % Enter rubric description
  Very Weak

0 pts

Weak

2 pts

Good

5 pts

Very Good

7 pts

Excellent

10 pts

Presenting
10 %

Report is free from spelling and grammatical errors and is formatted according to the guidelines provided in the homework guidelines and in the course manual guidelines for written work.

Very Weak

Contains many spelling and/or grammatical errors and is not formatted according to the guidelines
Weak

Contains some spelling and/or grammatical errors and is only partially formatted according to the guidelines
Good

Contains a few spelling and/or grammatical errors and is formatted according to most of the guidelines
Very Good

Contains one or two spelling and/or grammatical errors. Formatted according to guidelines.
Excellent

Free of spelling and grammatical errors; formatted according to guidelines.
Applying
20 %

Student is able to apply a procedure to complete a task.

Very Weak

Not all steps of the procedure completed: either no questions answered in the report or no data noted in the chart.
Weak

Some steps of the procedure were completed. Some questions were answered in the report and some data was noted in the chart.
Good

Steps 1, 2 and 3 of the procedure were completed. Most questions were answered in the report; most data was noted in the chart.
Very Good

Steps 1, 2 and 3 of the procedure were completed. All questions were answered in the report; most data was noted in the chart.
Excellent

Steps 1, 2 and 3 of the procedure were completed in full. All questions were answered in the report; all data was noted in the chart.
Analyzing
40 %

Student is able to correlate linguistic and social variables, or attribute respondents' attitudes to social variables.

Very Weak

No variation is pointed out and/or no attitudes are reported.
Weak

Variation is pointed out where it does not exist, or variation which is obvious from the data is not noted. Alternatively, the data is unclear such that the presence of variation cannot be determined.
Good

Variation explicitly pointed out in the report (or attitudes to variables pointed out). Correlation is not hypothesized.
Very Good

Variation explicitly pointed out in the report (or attitudes to variables pointed out). Correlation is hypothesized between linguistic variation and social variables (or between attitudes to variation and social variables). The student does not make explicit reference to material in the textbook(s) in supporting the hypothesis.
Excellent

Variation explicitly pointed out in the report (or attitudes to variables pointed out). Correlation is hypothesized between linguistic variation and social variables (or between attitudes to variation and social variables). Explicit reference to material in the textbook(s) is used in supporting the hypothesis.
Creating
10 %

Student is able to redesign an existing data collection chart for use for use on a new project.

Very Weak

Student does not submit a chart, submits only handwritten data (no work-processed chart devised beforehand), or submits a chart which does not specify the location and time during which data was gathered, the number of instances of code-switching observed, and/or the languages or varieties involved in the code-switch (if known).
Weak

Student devises a chart for the collection of data for the homework assignment. The chart is world-processed. It contains the location and time during which data was gathered, the number of instances of code-switching observed, the languages or varieties involved in the code-switch (if known).
Good

Student devises a chart for the collection of data for the homework assignment. The chart is world-processed. It contains the location and time during which data was gathered, the number of instances of code-switching observed, the languages or varieties involved in the code-switch (if known) and information relating to one or two of the relevant social variables indicated in the homework guidelines.
Very Good

Student devises a chart for the collection of data for the homework assignment. The chart is world-processed. It contains the location and time during which data was gathered, the number of instances of code-switching observed, the languages or varieties involved in the code-switch (if known) and information relating to some of the relevant social variables indicated in the homework guidelines.
Excellent

Student devises a chart for the collection of data for the homework assignment. The chart is world-processed. It contains the location and time during which data was gathered, the number of instances of code-switching observed, the languages or varieties involved in the code-switch (if known) and information relating to all relevant social variables indicated in the homework guidelines.
Evaluating
20 %

Student is able to draw conclusions about the relationship between code-switching, identity and power.

Very Weak

Report includes no clear response to the question or provides only a yes/no answer.
Weak

Report includes a clear statement responding to the question: "Can you identify cases in which code-switching is part of an attempt to ‘establish, cross or destroy boundaries’, as Gal suggests?"" The response is not a yes/no answer; however, the response does not incorporate specific examples from the data, although it may refer to specific extracts from the textbook(s) or another source.
Good

Report includes a clear statement responding to the question: "Can you identify cases in which code-switching is part of an attempt to ‘establish, cross or destroy boundaries’, as Gal suggests?"" The response is not a yes/no answer; it incorporates specific examples from the data collected by the student and relates these examples to knowledge from the course, thought without any reference to specific extracts from the textbook(s) or another source.
Very Good

Report includes a clear statement responding to the question: "Can you identify cases in which code-switching is part of an attempt to ‘establish, cross or destroy boundaries’, as Gal suggests?"" The response is not a yes/no answer; it incorporates specific examples from the data collected by the student and relates these examples to knowledge from the course, as indicated through specific reference to one or more extracts from the textbook(s) or other scholarly sources.
Excellent

Report includes a clear statement responding to the question: "Can you identify cases in which code-switching is part of an attempt to ‘establish, cross or destroy boundaries’, as Gal suggests?"" The response is not a yes/no answer; it incorporates specific examples from the data collected by the student and relates these examples to knowledge from the course, as indicated through specific reference to one or more extracts from the textbook(s) or other scholarly sources.



Keywords:
  • language, sociolinguistics, codes, code-switching

Subjects:

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