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iRubric: 8th Grade ELA Argumentative Essay Rubric
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Writing an Argument Essay
Description.
Students use their Atticus note-catchers and their understanding of Atticus as a character to weigh the evidence and craft the claim for their argument essay.
The prompt for the argument essay is set up to guide students toward the same position: It does make sense for Atticus to defend Tom Robinson. An answer to the contrary may show a lack of comprehension of Atticus as a character or of how best to use evidence. The goal of this essay is to teach students the basic skills involved in writing an argument essay.
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- Grade 8 ELA Module 2A, Unit 2, Lesson 10
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AP® English Language
Understanding the ap® english language argument rubric.
- The Albert Team
- Last Updated On: March 1, 2022
The AP® English Language exam contains three essays, two of which are the argument essays. The argument essays come with a prompt that contains a passage. The student must then analyze and immediately craft an appropriate argument that answers the prompt. This essay is different than the synthesis essay in that there is only one prompt that the student must analyze; however, the passage is much longer than the smaller sources found in the synthesis essay. In order to succeed on the AP® English Language argument essay the student must support his or her argument proficiently. This can be done by referencing the passage, adding his or her experiences, utilizing logic, and maintaining readable grammar and mechanics.
It is important, however, to note that the examiners know that you only have two hours and fifteen minutes to write three essays. Because of this, the essays do not have to be pristine, but they need to be firm in their argument, and more importantly, well-developed.
Referencing the Passage
You are given a passage and a prompt at the start of the argument essay that you as the writer must adhere to. Do not attempt to go off-topic, because the highest score that an off-topic argument essay can earn on the rubric is a 1. This argument must be supported as you write, and one of the best ways to do this is to reference the passage that you are given. This passage is your concrete proof for your argument, so utilize it. It is one of your greatest tools. An argument essay that has support from its passage allows the student to show that they can utilize sophisticated methods of supporting their arguments.
An example of a student that argues well to support his or her claim is seen below. The student is arguing that college is worth the money.
The largest motivator behind going or not going to college seems to be money. It is commonly accepted that a college education results in better financial situations later in life. It is certainly true that college grads earn, on average, 20,000 dollars more per year than those with only a high school diploma. (source F). It is also true that college grads are less likely to be unemployed. (source D)
This argument is done so well, because he or she references the text and analyzes it. By doing so, the student gains further depth to the argument and this student’s full essay (1A) would receive a score of an 8.
An example of an argument that does not reference the text is the following:
Primarily, a college education is worth the cost because you will never find yourself working in a fast food restaurant such as McDonald’s or Burger King. However, many people do not have a choice to work at fast food restaurants because they can’t afford college and their parents can’t afford it.
This argument, while developed, is not as convincing as the student that references the text correctly and clearly. Because of this, this student’s full essay (1C) would receive a lower score of 4.
Knowledge or Personal Experiences
Unlike the synthesis essay, the argument essays allow the student to insert any relevant knowledge or personal experiences that he or she has. This serves the purpose of bringing even more depth to the argument, and allows the student to show what they know.
The key to adding knowledge, and especially personal experience, is to only use relevant details. The College Board does not need to know about how fun your trip to the beach was, but if a small part of the experience relates to the prompt, then use it. Relating your argument to a relevant event can show the examiners that you can apply a concept, which may bump your score up a point.
An example of knowledge used in an AP® English Language argumentative essay is Student 1A that was referenced above. Student 1A does a great job implementing his or her knowledge by saying the following:
Coincidentally personal growth also plays a large role in the perceived quality of life. Taking this into consideration makes college more than a machine designed to increase an individual’s level of monetary success.
This student is using his or her knowledge here, showing how it is not only money that affects someone later in life, but the experiences that the person has in college. This is effective, showing why he or she received an 8.
Utilizing Logic and Details
Supporting details and logical arguments are a key point in the AP® English Language argument essay rubric , because lending more support to your argument allows the examiners to buy into that argument. When the examiners see your point so nicely developed, then you will jump up to higher scores such as 7s, 8s, or 9s depending on how much support there is and your eloquence.
Student 1A is an example of utilizing logic to support his or her argument. The student says the following:
Putting aside the idea of money seems counterintuitive when considering the worth of an education, but it is necessary. There is more to life. A large part of college is also personal growth.
This appeal to logic is used as a transition as the student brings a realistic approach to the prompt. The examiners will see this as a masterful use of adding details to the argument without losing track of the argument itself. Also, the examiners see that the student can stand on his own without the sources, although he or she utilizes them later on.
A student that does not utilize logic well is Student 1B . This student is heavily dependent on quotations from the sources, and this causes the student’s credibility to falter. The reader questions if the student is able to form his or her own ideas in a logical manner, leading to a drop in the student’s score. Being unable to form a logical structure to lay your argument on will result in a lower score of a 4 or a 5.
Use of Language
The use of language, while not the most influential part of the essay, does have an effect on the overall score. By use of language we mean the degree that the student utilizes grammar, spelling, and mechanics as well as figurative language that adds a persuasive element.
If the student uses the language well, then this will reveal to the examiner that the student can use writing as a tool to persuade. This is important in the AP® English Language argument essay, because inserting parallel structure or a perfectly placed analogy will impress your examiner.
Your grammar may not be the most pressing matter in the argument essay; however, if your grammar or mechanics are so poor that you are unclear in your argument, then the highest score that you can receive on the AP® English Language argument essay rubric is a 2.
Key Takeaways from the AP® English Language Argument Essay Rubric
In order to cover all of your bases in the AP® English Language exam argument essay you will want to be sure to practice months before the exam. Preparation is everything. A useful tip is to have the AP® English Language argument rubric in front of you as you write your first few attempts at a practice essay. This will keep your argument essay focused.
The most important part of the argument essay is to support your thesis, or the claim that you make to fulfill the prompt. If you reference the passage that you are given, add your own knowledge or personal experiences, be as detailed and logical as possible, and utilize language well, then your score will rise toward that sought-after 9.
Photo by Jeff Billings [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
By the way, you should check out Albert.io for your AP® English Language review. We have hundreds of AP® English Language practice questions written just for you!
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Common Core ELA EDITABLE Rubrics — Argument, Analysis, Research, & Narrative!
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Description
Never write another essay rubric! With this collection of EDITABLE Common Core writing rubrics and essay assignment template pages, you can assess nearly any piece of student writing. Provided as beautiful printables and Google Sheets designed for seamless import into Google Classroom, these rubrics cover the essay formats of Argument , Research , Literary Analysis , and Narrative Writing and are tied to a whopping 16 (!) ELA Common Core standards.
Additionally, each included standard is scaffolded in a beautiful, easy-to-follow scale format. Provided in both short-and-long-forms, this resource may represent the last time you ever need to think about creating essay rubrics for your students.
Included in your purchase (SEE PREVIEW):
- Editable assignment worksheet for each of the 4 essay types that include writing tips, a self and peer drafting checklist, and place for assignment due dates. Customizable!
- An Argumentative Essay short-form rubric (40 points - tied to CCRA.W.1, CCRA.R.1, CCRA.L.1, and CCRA.L.2)
- An Argumentative Essay long-form rubric (90 points - tied to CCRA.W.1, CCRA.W.4, CCRA.W.7, CCRA.W.8, CCRA.R.1, CCRA.L.1, CCRA.L.2, and CCRA.L.3)
- A Literary Analysis Essay short-form rubric (40 points - tied to CCRA.W.2, CCRA.R.1, CCRA.L.1, and CCRA.L.2)
- A Literary Analysis Essay long-form rubric (90 points - tied to CCRA.W.2, CCRA.W.4, CCRA.R.1, CCRA.R.3, CCRA.R.4, CCRA.L.1, CCRA.L.2, and CCRA.L.3)
- A Narrative Writing short-form rubric (40 points - tied to CCRA.W.3, CCRA.R.2, CCRA.L.1, and CCRA.L.2)
- A Narrative Writing long-Form rubric (90 points - tied to CCRA.W.3, CCRA.W.4, CCRA.W.5, CCRA.R.2, CCRA.L.1, CCRA.L.2, CCRA.L.4, and CCRA.L.5)
- A Research Essay short-form rubric (40 points - tied to CCRA.W.2, CCRA.W.7, and CCRA.L.3)
- A Research Essay long-form rubric (90 points - tied to CCRA.W.2, CCRA.W.4, CCRA.W.7, CCRA.W.8, CCRA.R.1, CCRA.L.1, CCRA.L.2, and CCRA.L.3)
- PLUS! Each rubric (8 in total!) is also included as a link to an editable Google Sheet that allows for grading customization and seamless integration into Google Classroom and many other Learning Management Systems (LMS's)
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Common Core Essay Rubrics Collection : High School ELA Common Core Standards and Scales : Theme Essay Workshop : Writing Literary Analysis Bundle : Writing Literary Analysis Classroom Posters : Writing Literary Analysis Directions
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Action-Adventure (FREE) : Back to School : Common Core Essay Rubrics Collection : Christmas : Create Your Own Superhero Project : Fantasy : Father’s Day : Grandparents Day : Halloween : Mystery : Mother’s Day : Realistic Fiction : Siblings Day : Spring Break : Science Fiction : Summer Vacation : Thanksgiving : Tragedy : Valentine’s Day : Family Narrative Guide Bundle : 6-Genre Narrative Guides Bundle : 7-Seasonal Narrative Guides : Complete Narrative Guide Bundle
LITERATURE ASSESSMENTS:
Antigone : A Thousand Acres : The Awakening : A Christmas Carol: Activities : A Christmas Carol: Quizzes : Common Core Essay Rubrics Collection : The Glass Menagerie : Great Expectations: Activities : Great Expectations: Quizzes : Heart of Darkness : The Metamorphosis : The Power of One : A Prayer for Owen Meany : Their Eyes Were Watching God : Theme Essay Workshop : A Thousand Acres : To Kill a Mockingbird: Activities : To Kill a Mockingbird: Quizzes : Writing Literary Analysis Directions
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A Christmas Carol Complete Unit Bundle : Choice Reading Unit : Common Core Essay Rubrics Collection : Create Your Own Superhero Project : Daily Writing Prompts Bundle : Experiential Learning Projects Bundle : Family Narrative Bundle : Great Expectations Complete Unit Bundle : Growth Mindset Writing Prompts : Horror Writing Workshop : Latin Vocabulary Bundle : Literary Devices: Creative Writing Prompts (FREE) : Literary Devices: Creative Writing Worksheets (FREE) : Literary Terms Units Bundle : Mystery Writing Workshop : Narrative Guides: 6-Genre Creative Writing Bundle : Research Guide: 50 Topics Bundle : Research Unit Bundle : SAT Words of the Day Bundle : Seasonal Narrative Guides: 7-Holiday Creative Writing Bundle : Song Lessons: Analyzing Literary Devices Through Pop Music : Student Choice Biography Research Project : Theme Essay Workshop : To Kill a Mockingbird Complete Unit Bundle : Tragedy Writing Workshop : Writing Literary Analysis Bundle
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New York State Regents Examination in English Language Arts (Common Core) Part 2 Rubric: Writing to Sources - Argument. An essay that addresses fewer texts than required by the task can be scored no higher than a 3. An essay that is a personal response and makes little or no reference to the task or texts can be scored no higher than a 1.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS Rating of Essay and Response Questions (1) In training raters to score student essays and responses for each part of the examination, follow the ... NY 12234 New York State Regents Examination in English Language Arts Part 2 Rubric Writing From Sources: Argument. Regents Exam in ELA Rating Guide — Jan. '19 [4] Anchor ...
ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS Tuesday, June 12, 2018—9:15 a.m. to 12: ... NY 12234 New York State Regents Examination in English Language Arts Part 2 Rubric Writing From Sources: Argument. Regents Exam in ELA Rating Guide — June '18 [4] Anchor Paper - Part 2 - Level 6 - A ... essay demonstrates proper citation of sources to avoid plagiarism ...
Regents Exam in ELA (Common Core) Rating Guide — Jan. '15 [3] THE STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 New York State Regents Examination in English Language Arts (Common Core) Part 2 Rubric Writing From Sources: Argument An essay that addresses fewer texts than required by the task can be scored no higher than a 3.
Questions about general administration procedures for Regents Examinations should be directed to the Office of State Assessment (OSA) at 518-474-5902 or 518-474-5900. For information about the rating of the Regents Examination in English Language Arts, contact Laura LaPan of OSA at 518-474-5902. School administrators should print or photocopy ...
Logical, compelling progression of ideas in essay;clear structure which enhances and showcases the central idea or theme and moves the reader through the text. Organization flows so smoothly the reader hardly thinks about it. Effective, mature, graceful transitions exist throughout the essay.
An objective tone is used in few areas. Work contains spelling, punctuation, capitalization and/or grammar mistakes that detract from the reader's ability to understand the writing. The writing adheres to few formatting guidelines included in the prompt. Mostly informal language is used, with some repetition.
FINAL ELA Text-based Writing Rubrics, Grades 6-11: Argumentation Florida Standards Assessments 1 UPDATED OCTOBER 2014 Grades 6-11 Argumentation Text-based Writing Rubric (Score points within each domain include most of the characteristics below.) Score Purpose, Focus, and Organization (4-point Rubric) Evidence and Elaboration (4-point Rubric)
Regents Exam in ELA — Jan. '20 [12] Part 2 Argument Directions: Closely read each of the four texts provided on pages 13 through 20 and write a source-based argument on the topic below. You may use the margins to take notes as you read and scrap paper to plan your response. Write your argument beginning on page 1 of your essay booklet. Topic:
English Language Arts Argumentation Writing Rubrics, Grades 6-12 . Ohio's State Test Argumentation Writing Rubric , Grades 6-12 Page 2 of 3. ... Ohio's State Test Argumentation Writing Rubric , Grades 6-12 Page 3 of 3 Score Purpose, Focus, and Organization (4-points) Evidence and Elaboration (4-points) Conventions of Standard English
Scoring Rubric for Question 1: Synthesis Essay 6 points Reporting Category Scoring Criteria Row A Thesis (0-1 points) 4.B 0 points For any of the following: ... Crafting a nuanced argument by consistently identifying and exploring complexities or tensions across the sources. 2. Articulating the implications or limitations of an argument (either the
8th Grade ELA Argumentative Essay Rubric 8th Grade ELA Argumentative Essay Rubric The attached rubric supports Writing Standard 1 under the Common Core State Standards. This rubric was specifically designed with Community House Middle School in mind. Rubric Code: S889X7. By cstaab Ready to use ...
Regents Examination in English Language Arts, Multiple-choice Question Scoring Key, only (81 KB) June 2023 Regents Examination in English Language Arts Regular size version (153 KB) Large type version (702 KB) Scoring Key PDF version (85.74 KB) Excel version (19 KB) Rating Guide Part 2, 6A - 4B, pages 1-27 (1.71 MB)
A rubric for Grade 8 English Language Arts. The assignment title is "Argumentative Essay". Write an argumentative essay with a clear claim with three arguments, evidence that supports each argument, specific details to explain evidence, a counterargument, rebuttal, and conclusion.
Teaching the Writing from Sources Essay Writing from Sources Strategy: Half-Writes Exploding Argument Student-Friendly Writing from Sources Rubric Teaching Rhetoric in Writing and Speaking Public Speaking for High Schoolers RADaR Revising Method Proofreading Symbols Common Core ELA Regents Vocabulary Removing Scaffolds for the Writing from ...
The prompt for the argument essay is set up to guide students toward the same position: It does make sense for Atticus to defend Tom Robinson. An answer to the contrary may show a lack of comprehension of Atticus as a character or of how best to use evidence. The goal of this essay is to teach students the basic skills involved in writing an ...
MCAP English Language Arts and Literacy. Argumentative Rubric, Grades 6- 8 and 10. Written Expression. Points The Response. 4 Points • Demonstrates a full and complete understanding of ideas in the texts by providing an accurate analysis supported with effective and convincing textual evidence. • States and supports claim(s) in an effective ...
Student-Friendly Rubric for the Writing from Sources Essay. Identity Archive. Unit 3: Society and its Structure. Developing Skills : Student-Friendly Writing from Sources Rubric. Preview Resource Add a Copy of Resource to my Google Drive.
Grade 9 2015 ELA Writing ARGUMENTATIVE TEXT-BASED WRITING RUBRIC Grades 6-10 Argumentative Text-based Writing Rubric (Score points within each domain include most of the characteristics below.) Score Purpose, Focus, and Organization (4-point Rubric) Evidence and Elaboration (4-point Rubric) Conventions of Standard English
Utilizing Logic and Details. Supporting details and logical arguments are a key point in the AP® English Language argument essay rubric, because lending more support to your argument allows the examiners to buy into that argument. When the examiners see your point so nicely developed, then you will jump up to higher scores such as 7s, 8s, or ...
Regents Exam in ELA Rating Guide — Aug. '17 [3] THE STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 New York State Regents Examination in English Language Arts (Common Core) Part 2 Rubric Writing From Sources: Argument An essay that addresses fewer texts than required by the task can be scored no higher than a 3.
An Argumentative Essay short-form rubric (40 points - tied to CCRA.W.1, CCRA.R.1, CCRA.L.1, and CCRA.L.2) ... The Language of Educational Art's ELA Essay Rubrics Collection is provided in print-ready, bookmarked, copy/paste enabled, and adjustable PDF files. The essay assignment file is provided as an editable PowerPoint template file.
Regents Exam in ELA Rating Guide — Jan. '23 [57] Anchor Level 4-B CONTENT AND ANALYSIS: x The response introduces a well-reasoned central idea (The central idea of this passage is the true barbarity of man) and a writing strategy (This idea of the inhumane barbarity found in humans is developed through clever use of juxtaposition) that clearly establish the criteria for analysis.
Get 1:1 help brainstorming topics, outlining your essay, revising a draft, or editing grammar. Learn More about UPcheive. Writing a strong college admissions essay Learn about the elements of a solid admissions essay. Close Modal. Close Avoiding common admissions essay mistakes Learn some of the most common mistakes made on college essays ...