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Articles

Rubric‐referenced self‐assessment and middle school students’ writing

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Pages 199-214 | Published online: 30 Apr 2010
 

Abstract

This study investigated the relationship between middle school students’ scores for a written assignment (N = 162) and a process that involved students in generating criteria and self‐assessing with a rubric. Gender, time spent writing, grade level, prior rubric use, and previous achievement in English were also examined. The treatment involved using a model essay to scaffold the process of generating a list of criteria for an effective essay, reviewing a written rubric, and using the rubric to self‐assess first drafts. The comparison condition involved generating a list of criteria and reviewing first drafts. Findings include a main effect of treatment, gender, grade level, writing time, and previous achievement on total essay scores, as well as main effects on scores for every criterion on the scoring rubric. The results suggested that reading a model, generating criteria, and using a rubric to self‐assess can help middle school students produce more effective writing.

Acknowledgement

The authors would like to thank Hongyu Cheng and Tony Leonardi for their help with the scoring of essays, and the reviewers of this manuscript for their thoughtful suggestions for revision.

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