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A Strengths-Based Guide to Assessing Student Progress (DOWNLOADABLE)

By Evie Blad & Francis Sheehan 鈥 April 14, 2025 1 min read
Grading and assessment SR
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Teachers use rubrics to ensure consistency and clarity in grading student assignments by carefully detailing what a successful project looks like.

But the seeming simplicity of these assessment tools masks complicated questions about how to measure student progress and how to encourage continued learning, said Kevin Perks, the senior director of Quality Schools and Districts at WestEd, a nonpartisan education research organization.

鈥淵ou have to determine what constructs to measure; how to measure those accurately, with validity; and then how to develop instruments that can be used consistently,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ssessment literacy is one of the largest knowledge gaps teachers have. It鈥檚 an area where they aren鈥檛 really trained.鈥

When designed effectively, rubrics can clarify expectations, minimize subjectivity, and standardize grading criteria across multiple teachers, said Perks, who leads training sessions for teachers about classroom assessment.

There are many schools of thought about how to properly design these grading tools. In this downloadable guide, explore Perks鈥 suggestions for a simplified, centered on a specific learning standard.

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A version of this article appeared in the April 23, 2025 edition of Education Week as Does Your Rubric Make the Grade?

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