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iRubric: "Tell-Tale Heart" Argument Poster Group Project rubric

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"Tell-Tale Heart" Argument Poster Group Project 
This rubric is for evaluating argument essays/posters written and presented by students to assess their ability to formulate argumentative writings that support the guilt or innocence of the narrator in "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allen Poe. Group members are only assessed on their portion(s) of the project.
Rubric Code: ZXX5A8W
Ready to use
Public Rubric
Subject: (General)  
Type: Writing  
Grade Levels: 6-8

Powered by iRubric Project Elements
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(N/A)

POINTS EARNED

(N/A)

Claim/Introduction/Thesis

Connect the situation and/or your position to something the reader/audience can relate to historically or socially; Briefly preview (don't list) the arguments you're going to make; State the thesis in a way that links to the arguments you previewed and should provide and answer to the prompt.

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MEMBER RESPONSIBLE:
POINTS EARNED
Reason/Idea/Evidence #1

POINT (Idea from Insanity Definition),
EVIDENCE (What does the text say?),
EXPLANATION (what does the evidence mean?),
LINK (how/why does the evidence matter to your thesis statement of guilt or innocence?)

*

MEMBER RESPONSIBLE:
POINTS EARNED
Reason/Idea/Evidence #2

POINT (Idea from Insanity Definition),
EVIDENCE (What does the text say?),
EXPLANATION (what does the evidence mean?),
LINK (how/why does the evidence matter to your thesis statement of guilt or innocence?)

*

MEMBER RESPONSIBLE:
POINTS EARNED
Reason/Idea/Evidence #3

POINT (Idea from Insanity Definition),
EVIDENCE (What does the text say?),
EXPLANATION (what does the evidence mean?),
LINK (how/why does the evidence matter to your thesis statement of guilt or innocence?)

*

MEMBER RESPONSIBLE:
POINTS EARNED
Counter/Opposing Claim

What others who disagree might say (Point)
what evidence they may cite (Evidence/Says), what they might say it means to the opposite view (Explanation/Means) and why it is wrong (Link/Matters).

*

MEMBER RESPONSIBLE:
POINTS EARNED
Conclusion

Restate the thesis, perhaps in a slightly different way than in the Intro.; Clearly but briefly repeat the separate arguments and how they were linked to your thesis; End the paragraph with a summarizing statement that leaves the reader/audience thinking about why your position is correct.

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MEMBER RESPONSIBLE:
POINTS EARNED
Poster Creativity

ALL GROUP MEMBERS

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POINTS EARNED
Group Presentation

ALL GROUP MEMBERS

*
POINTS EARNED
Outline/Rough Draft

ALL GROUP MEMBERS

*
POINTS EARNED



Keywords:
  • argumentative writing


Types:





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