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Reading Rubric
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Four point rubric: |
4 = exemplary reading skills
3 = expected college level reading skills
2 = below college level reading skills; improvement needed
1 = limited reading skills, improvements required |
Given a reading task or
assignment, the student:
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4. |
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Independently varies the use of critical reading
techniques according to the type of material and purpose
for reading, particularly for study reading tasks
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Analyzes written materials for the following elements
(when applicable): writer's purpose, main idea,
organizational patterns, tone, audience, bias, and point
of view
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Analyzes written materials for the following underlying
ideas of the writer: assumptions, blocks, inferences
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Identifies and explains language devices and language
adaptations in written materials, as they contribute to
the writer's meaning
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Determines, understands, and recalls meanings of new
vocabulary words through context clues
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Evaluates the logic and accuracy of evidence in support
of the writer's main idea
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Independently applies critical reading skills to support
acceptance or rejection of written materials
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3. |
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Varies
the use of critical reading techniques according to the
type of material and purpose for reading, particularly
for study reading tasks, although not completely
independently
-
Can
identify the following elements (when applicable):
writer's purpose, main idea, organizational patterns,
tone, audience, bias, and point of view, as they
contribute to the writer's meaning
-
Can
identify the following underlying ideas of the writer:
assumptions, blocks, inferences
-
Identifies language devices and language adaptations in
written materials, as they contribute to the writer's
meaning
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Determines and understands meanings of new vocabulary
words through context clues
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Identifies the logic and accuracy of evidence in support
of the writer's main idea
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Applies
critical reading skills to support acceptance or
rejection of written materials, although not completely
independently
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2. |
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Uses
the same literal reading techniques for all types of
written materials regardless of type or purpose, even
though study reading requires specific types of reading
techniques
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Can
identify the writer's main idea
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Can
sometimes identify the underlying ideas of the writer:
assumptions, blocks, inferences
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Can
sometimes identify language devices and language
adaptations in written materials when directed that
these are in the material
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Sometimes determines meanings of new vocabulary words
through context clues, although sometimes avoids new
words
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Sometimes identifies general support sentences
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Applies
literal reading skills to comprehend and support
acceptance or rejection of written materials, although
not independently
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1. |
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Has
difficulty using literal reading techniques for written
materials regardless of type or purpose, even though
study reading requires specific types of reading
techniques
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Has
difficulty in identifying the writer's main idea,
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Has
difficulty in identifying the following underlying ideas
of the writer: assumptions, blocks, inferences
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Does
not understand language devices and language adaptations
in written materials
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Generally avoids new words in written materials
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Has
difficulty in identifying general support sentences
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Rarely
comprehends enough of written materials to logically
comprehend, accept or reject the concepts
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© Copyright 2004 Rio
Salado College, a member of the
Maricopa County Community College District.
Disclaimer.
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