ENGL 1013 Final F (0-59) D (60-69) C (70-79) B (80-89) A

ENGL 1013 Final F (0-59) D (60-69) C (70-79) B (80-89) A (90-100)

Introduction

2. Construct thesis-driven essays that adhere to a specific purpose, context, and audience.

no introduction or no separate introductory paragraph

poor or skimpy introduction; context not established

some introduction; nothing beyond a forecast and/or a hint at context for thesis

introduction establishes developed context; points reader in direction essay will take

introduction grasps reader’s attention (engages the reader) with well-developed context and points reader clearly in direction essay will take

Thesis and Coherence

2. Construct thesis-driven essays that adhere to a specific purpose, context, and audience.

no articulation of thesis and/or mismatch between thesis and the body

poor articulation of thesis and/or body paragraphs often veer off topic or are repetitive

some articulation of thesis; and/or almost every paragraph works to support the thesis (occasional tangent or repetition)

clear articulation of thesis; every paragraph works to support the thesis

clear and purposeful articulation of thesis; focused and unified paragraphs all work to support the thesis

Paragraph Development

2. Construct thesis-driven essays that adhere to a specific purpose, context, and audience.

poor paragraphs with no clear topic sentence; multiple topics; little or no development

poor paragraphs with occasional hint of topic; little or no development

some structure and development of paragraphs and/or some with clear topic sentences or focus, but not consistently

all body paragraphs are developed; each body paragraph contains a clear topic sentence

all body paragraphs are consistently well developed; all contain a clear topic sentence and the appropriate number of sentences that provide examples and develop points

Use of Examples and Details(Support)

2. Construct thesis-driven essays that adhere to a specific purpose, context, and audience.

no use of specific, concrete examples

little use of specific, concrete examples

some use of examples or evidence, but not consistent; no evidence or examples in places where they are needed

frequent or consistent use of examples and evidence; example or evidence appears whenever the reader asks, “For instance?”

wealth of relevant supporting material, smoothly integrated into the text

Transitions

2. Construct thesis-driven essays that adhere to a specific purpose, context, and audience.

no transition between paragraphs; no flow

weak or occasional transition between paragraphs; poor flow

some transition or flow between paragraphs; transitions between most paragraphs; transitions may consist of single words

consistent transition between paragraphs and points within paragraphs; strong flow; transitions may consist of single words and/or phrases

strong, clear, and consistent transition between paragraphs and points within paragraphs; clear expression of relationship between ideas

Conclusion

2. Construct thesis-driven essays that adhere to a specific purpose, context, and audience.

no conclusion or no separate conclusion paragraph

nothing beyond cursory summary of ideas in essay

comprehensive and developed summary of points made, but nothing beyond summary; no broad conclusions/lessons

goes beyond summary; attempt is made at expressing significance, relevance, or implications, but ideas are underdeveloped or not expressed clearly

satisfying and fulfilling end of essay that revisits thesis, main points, and context without simply repeating introduction; clearly expresses significance, relevance, or implication

Sentence Variation

3. Write in standard edited English, free from major lapses in usage, mechanics, and spelling.

composed primarily of simple sentences; no sentence pattern variety

little or no variation of sentences; monotonous use of sentence type. (length/complexity)

some variation of sentences; sentences of varying length or type, but not varied effectively

effective variation of sentence length and type; text is fluid

richly varied sentence structure; text is fluid, polished, balanced, and energetic

Grammar and Mechanics

3. Write in standard edited English, free from major lapses in usage, mechanics, and spelling.

consistent and pervasive lack of control of punctuation and conventional English; contains numerous serious errors

lacks control of punctuation and conventional English; may contain a pattern of major errors, such as fused sentences, gross S-V agreement errors, verb form errors, or fragments

contains isolated to no major errors (fused sentences, gross S-V agreement errors, unintentional fragments, or verb form errors); spelling, punctuation, and grammar are generally correct

displays control of punctuation and conventional written English; no major errors, such as fused sentences, gross S-V agreement errors, verb form errors, or unintentional fragments; may contain slight errors in punctuation and spelling

displays a mastery of punctuation and conventional written English; contains no major errors; contains no structural or grammatical problems, such as misplaced modifiers, shifts in viewpoint, or pronoun-antecedent disagreement; spelling is correct; mechanically perfect or nearly so

MLA Citation and Documentation

Locate, evaluate, and synthesize primary and secondary sources without falling into plagiarism; document sources in at least one standard style of documentation (GELO 1, 6)

***Added for the Pilot Program***

Essay does not contain in-text citations and/or a works cited page

Consistent page formatting errors.

Obvious plagiarism.

Works cited page and in-text citations demonstrate significant punctuation issues

and/or

works cited page and in-text citations demonstrate significant formatting issues

and/or

works cited page entries are not in alphabetical order

and/or

multiple extraneous works cited entries (information from sources clearly not used in text).

Some page formatting errors.

Unintentional plagiarism.

Works cited page and in-text citations demonstrate slight punctuation issues/inaccuracies

and/or

works cited page and/or in-text citations demonstrate slight formatting issues

and/or

one extraneous works cited entry (information from sources clearly not used in text).

Isolated page formatting errors.

Works cited page or in-text citations demonstrate slight punctuation issues/inaccuracies

Negligible page formatting errors.

Works cited page and in-text citations demonstrate mastery of MLA citation and documentation

Essay free from page formatting errors.

*If any category is evaluated in the “F” range, the highest grade the essay may receive is 69 (“D”).