This rubric may be used for assessing individual blog entries, including comments on peers’ blogs.
Via Alfredo Corell, Javier Sánchez Bolado
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Alfredo Corell's curator insight,
December 15, 2013 2:02 PM
Send quizzes to your students. Know within minutes how they’re performing with InstantScore. Plus, discover who needs help before teaching the next lesson. Free plan for up to 51 students 5 US$ for 101 and 26 quizzes, and finally 10 US$ for unlimited use |
James Jandebeur's curator insight,
November 22, 2013 9:48 AM
Now you can earn game achievements in learning new things. Considering how popular this simple idea seems to be in gaming, it should be effective. Some form of feedback, especially if it is immediate and pleasing in some way, is usually helpful.
Dawn Wright's curator insight,
November 27, 2013 5:35 PM
I don't know if this will replace paid credits, but it is a start toward a new paradiam
Paul Avila's curator insight,
November 30, 2013 9:57 PM
This is an interesting idea to use in the classroom. It would motivate students to improve their skills to achieve these badges. I would suggest implementing these with some incentive system so that students pursue these badges instead of earning them passively as useless labels. These badges can be useful to track progress of historical thinking skills. |
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This rubric may be used for assessing individual blog entries, including comments on peers’ blogs.
download the rubric in pdf format: https://www2.uwstout.edu/content/profdev/rubrics/blog_rubric_revised.pdf