Assignment List

Assignment List

Grading Standards

A Sample Syllabus

Workplace Competencies

Contact Instructors

Student Papers

W231 Course Goals

Learning Audit

 


Course Grading Standards

Competency Excellent (A+ - B+) Acceptable (B - C) Unacceptable (C - F)
Management of Purpose and audience Subject and purpose for writing are explicit within documents and reflect thorough understanding of assignment's role in project

Purpose and audience control choices consistently across documents

Aareness of purpose and audience is apparent in all documents and corresponds to assignments

Topic choice reflects understanding of applied research; topic and community audience relationship is clear; project scope is reasonable 

Writer's sense of purpose may be lacking or inconsistent with assignment and/or audience

Stated purposes may not correspond to development withini document or may be inappropriately limited (e.g., informational ones when analysis is required) 

Research Planning Progress Reports, recommendation report define project direction and research scope comprehensively; project development documents support stated purpose

Progress report is creative and thorough in planning sources and methods of data collection

Portfolio transmittal memo may discuss project's evolution or revisions made to accommodate findings and adapt plan

Recommendation report shows that an internally consistent project has been conducted; project development documents support stated purpose

Acceptable rationale for choice of project methods is described in recommendation report; choices are made based on type of information needed rather than ease of access or design 

Recommendation report and related project documents may lack consistency in linking logical method to problem being studied

Plan anticipated in proposal or retrospectively described in Recommendation report is poorly detailed, vague 

Research Methods Primary research tools are carefully designed to collect meaningful data and record it systematically

An abundance of information and data allow the writer to select critically from it as basis for reports

Audience (interviewee, questionnaire respondent) is thoughtfully considered in design of primary research tools

Secondary research is focused and comprehensive; a research trail is established, perhaps beyond required level

Tools solicit relevant information consistent with purpose of project

Sufficient research data has been collected to enable writer to fulfill project purpose

Primary research tools adhere to guidelines of good design (e.g., interview guides contain primarily open-ended questions)

Majority of secondary sources are from professional, trade, or academic journals and selected to address issues relevant to local problem 

Inappropriately designed primary research tools enable writer to collect little data of value

Research may be incomplete or too limited in scope to furnish writer with needed information

Primary research tools may show limited relationship to project purpose, limited understanding of sources or be ambiguous, offensive, or inapprorpriate for respondents

Seconday sources may be insuffiecient in number, drawn predominantly from publications lacking academic credibility, only vaguely applicable to research purpose, or used inappropriately 

Synthesis Literature review report thoroughly discusses relationship between literature and situation

Recommendation report analysis is closely linked to audience factors; conclusions and major findings are emphasized; research is reconfigured to create new, significant information for the audience

Performance Review discusses application of learning to portfolio document texts, incorporating discussion of course/individual goals

Literature Review report identified relevant issues in literature and links them to the local problem

Recommendation report analysis is linked to audience; findings are explained in terms of organizational applicability

Performance Review discusses relationsip of course content to writer, though discussion may be predominantly generalization 

Literature review report may be limited to summarizing secondary sources; writer may "stack" quotation and paraphrase of sources with little supporting discussion

Recommendation report reports research either without explicit connection to local problem or with an untenable one

Portfolio documents may suggest that assignments have been completed as independent writings with little sense of connection between them 

Analysis Logical conclusions are drawn from carefully selected findings and explained thoroughly to fulfill writer's purpose

Selective use of multiple, related sources is precise and incisive

Relevant parts of sources are carefully blended into text as support or elaboration; balance of summary, paraphrase, and quotation enhances quality of analysis

Development of analytical documents results in a sense of thorough and complete understanding for readers

 

Opinion is excluded or clearly identified as such in favor of rational interpretation of research

 

Analysis may be supplemented with graphics, appendices, or other non-required information that is relevant to purpose

Generalizations arise from examination of sources, though a disproportionate amount of discussion may be devoted to reporting; conclusions may be broader than primary data support

Varied research findings are selected and presented in research-based reports; most unnecessary data and detail are excluded.

Sources are introduced at approrpriate points in the text; writer manages use of summary, paraphrase, and quotation correctly

Development meets required length guidelines; level of detail is varied among documents appropriately

Analysis is impartial, objective; personal views may occasionally intrude but do not control overall analysis 

Unsupported conclusions are often present; high level of generalization may be characteristic of several documents

Analytical documents may rely heavily on reporting the viewpoints of one or two sources, or marginally releant dtail may be included with little regard for readers' need to know

Writer shows little understanding of effective use of sources in relation to own text

Development of idea is minimal; readers have no little or no basis to evaluate the validity of conclusions

Writer may "judge" the research findings or problem based on personal experience 

Organization Organizational strategies underscore emphasis of main points, are appropriate for content, and enhance readers' accessibility to main points

Context is established early in all documents at level appropriate to reader/writer relationship

Paragraphs are fully developed, unified, cohesive, and of appropriate length for given document

Organization of research tools reflects understanding of effective information-gathering techniques (e.g., begin with an easy question) and logical progression of items

Attention is apparent to visual organizers that include headings, effective use of white space or other document design features

Content is logically ordered in all documents; research process may control organization of primary research-based reports and correspondence

Assumptions that reader has existing knowledge of assignment may be evident in lack of context

Most paragraphs are fully develped and cohesive; transitions are sued

Research tools are logically ordered so that internally related information is grouped and progression of questions or labels in research tools is reasonable

Research process may control organization of primary research-based reports and correspondence

Some use of visual organizers such as headings is made

An overall organizational pattern may be difficult to identify or reflective of an overall lack of coherence in context; writer's inability to perceive how text must be organized to meet th needs of a reader other than self is apparent

Context is rarely or incompeltely furnished

A pattern of underdeveloped paragraphs or excessively long ones lacking in unity may be noted

Sequence of items in research tools suggests little or no overall organizational strategy

Writer's inability to perceive how text must be organized to meet the needs of a reader other than self is apparent


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