| Rubric for Holistic Scoring of Analysis of an Argument |
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6 - Outstanding |
A 6 paper presents a cogent, well-articulated critique of the argument and demonstrates mastery of the elements of effective writing.
A typical paper in this category
- clearly identifies and insightfully analyzes important features of the argument
- develops ideas cogently, organizes them logically, and connects them with clear transitions
- effectively supports the main points of the critique
- demonstrates control of language, including diction and syntactic variety
- demonstrates facility with the conventions of standard written English but may have minor flaws
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| 5 - Strong |
A 5 paper presents a well-developed critique of the argument and demonstrates good control of the elements of effective writing.
A typical paper in this category
- clearly identifies important features of the argument and analyzes them in a generally thoughtful way
- develops ideas clearly, organizes them logically, and connects them with appropriate transitions
- sensibly supports the main points of the critique
- demonstrates control of the language, including diction and syntactic variety
- demonstrates facility with the conventions of standard written English but may have occasional flaws
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| 4 - Adequate |
A 4 paper presents a competent critique of the argument and demonstrates adequate control of the elements of writing.
A typical paper in this category
- identifies and analyzes important features of the argument
- develops and organizes ideas satisfactorily but may not connect them with transitions
- supports the main points of the critique
- demonstrates sufficient control of language to convey ideas with reasonable clarity
- generally follows the conventions of standard written English but may have some flaws
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| 3 - Limited |
A 3 paper demonstrates some competence in analytical writing skills and in its control of the elements of writing but is plainly flawed.
A typical paper in this category exhibits one or more of the following characteristics:
- does not identify or analyze most of the important features of the argument, although some analysis of the argument is present
- devotes most of its time to analyzing tangential or irrelevant issues
- is limited in the logical development and organization of ideas
- offers support of little relevance and value for points of the critique
- does not convey meaning clearly
- contains occasional major errors or frequent minor errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics
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| 2 - Seriously Flawed |
A 2 paper demonstrates serious weaknesses in analytical writing skills.
A typical paper in this category exhibits one or more of the following characteristics:
- does not present a critique based on logical analysis, but may instead present the writer's own views on the subject
- does not develop ideas or is disorganized
- provides little, if any, relevant or reasonable support
- has serious and frequent problems in the use of language and in sentence structure
- contains numerous errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics that interfere with meaning
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| 1 - Fundamentally Deficient |
A 1 paper demonstrates fundamental deficiencies in analytical writing skills.
A typical paper in this category exhibits more than one of the following characteristics:
- provides little evidence of the ability to understand and analyze the argument
- provides little evidence of the ability to develop an organized response
- has severe and persistent errors in language and sentence structure
- contains a pervasive pattern or errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics that results in incoherence
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0----illegible, off-topic, in a foreign language, or merely copies the topic
NR--blank or nonverbal
(Adapted from a holistic scoring rubric used for the GMAT exam.) |
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