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Grading Standards for
Composition Classes
At Shawnee State
University
Composition students: Below you
will find the official grading standards for major essays in English
1101, 1102, and 1105, as approved
by the SSU Writing Faculty in June 2006. A copy of these standards
appears in the front of The Longman Concise Companion, SSU ed., which is
required for students in all sections of English 1101, 1102, 1104, 1105,
and 1107. Because some of the standards include jargon with
which you may not be familiar, this electronic copy includes links with
additional information.
These grading
standards describe the typical characteristics of an essay at each grade
level. Of course, some essays will not fit neatly into one grade
category. Some essays, for example, may have a few strengths typically
found in A papers but other characteristics more common to C
papers. The final grade an essay receives will depend on the weight the
instructor gives each criterion, how well the essay fulfills the
requirements of the assignment, and whether the essay was turned in by
the date due.
|
The A Essay |
The B Essay | The C Essay
| The D Essay |
The F Essay |
Condensed
Version of Standards |
The A Essay
The A (exceptional) essay is characterized by these strengths:
Content and Development
-
The A essay meets or exceeds
all of the requirements of the assignment in an innovative
and scholarly manner.
-
The essay
effectively meets the needs of the
rhetorical situation.
-
The
topic is focused.
The thesis claim
is clear and polished.
-
Claims
are supported with
specific (and
appropriate) evidence; detailed, concrete
examples and explanations;
and valid reasoning.
Organization
Style
-
The prose is
clear and memorable.
The author’s voice is distinctive and
contextually appropriate.
-
The use of
subordination helps readers understand how subtopics are related to
one another. The sentences and paragraphs, varied in length,
produce a striking rhetorical effect.
-
The
diction is thoughtful; the vocabulary is
appropriate to the target audience.
Mechanics
Research and Documentation
(Not all assignments require research
and documentation. Disregard this category for such assignments.)
Only papers that excel in all four (or, if researched, five) categories
will be awarded with As.
The B Essay
The B (good) essay is marked by these
characteristics:
Content and Development
Organization
Style
-
The prose is
clear and readable.
The author’s voice
is apparent.
-
Sentence structure is appropriate for
educated
readers. The author demonstrates a control of syntax, though the
use of
subordination may not be as striking as that in an A
paper. The sentences are varied.
-
The modifiers are distinctive, and the
diction is
precise.
Mechanics
Research and Documentation
(Not all assignments
require research and documentation. Disregard this category for such
assignments.)
-
Secondary
sources
are used thoughtfully.
-
The sources are appropriate to the assignment,
suggesting that the writer evaluated the sources and discarded
many that were unreliable or otherwise inappropriate.
-
The sources are
cited in the prescribed format
(typically MLA or
APA).
-
Paraphrases
and quotations are well-integrated.
-
Primary and secondary
sources are analyzed.
Only papers that are excellent or above average in all
four (or, if researched, five) categories will be awarded with Bs.
The C Essay
The C (competent) essay exhibits some of these
characteristics:
Content and Development
-
The paper meets the minimum requirements of the
assignment but often does nothing more.
-
The essay is generally
purposeful, but it may be
predictable. Writers of C papers rarely take chances. The
C essay typically addresses the knowledge level and attitudes
of peers, occasionally over- or underestimating other
readers’ prior
knowledge, assumptions, or beliefs.
-
The topic may only be generally defined.
There is a thesis statement, but it may be general (too vague) or
unsophisticated (too blunt).
-
The supporting
evidence is often obvious and easily
accessible. There may be occasional minor lapses in
reasoning.
Organization
Style
-
The expression is competent, but it may lack vigor.
-
The sentence structure is often relatively simple,
relying primarily on
simple and compound sentences.
-
Word choice is technically correct. However, the
vocabulary may be limited, or the
diction may sometimes be too
casual or too formal for the intended
audience.
Mechanics
-
Weaknesses in punctuation, spelling, and usage
suggest that the writer is unfamiliar with certain conventions of
Standard American English.
However, the essay is generally free of
sentence-level errors and
stigmatized errors.
Research and Documentation
(Certain assignments may not require
research and documentation. Disregard this category for such
assignments.)
-
The prescribed
number of sources is used.
-
The sources
are generally appropriate to the assignment, suggesting that the
writer discarded some that were unreliable.
-
The sources
are cited in the prescribed format (typically
MLA or
APA), but
there may be a few minor errors in
documentation.
-
Paraphrases and
quotations may appear to have been pasted into the text without
regard for the writer’s own tone and style. Consequently,
readers
may find these paraphrases and
quotations disruptive.
The C paper may be particularly strong in one
or more category, but flawed in other areas. All papers submitted in a
college-level class should be mechanically correct; mere absence of
errors will not be awarded with a grade of C.
The D Essay
The D (weak) essay is marked by some of these
characteristics:
Content and Development
Organization
Style
-
There may be lapses in
clarity.
-
The sentence structure may be flawed.
-
The vocabulary may be inappropriate for college-level
writing.
Mechanics
Research and Documentation
(Certain assignments may not require
research and documentation. Disregard this category for such
assignments.)
-
The paper may not use as many
secondary
sources as required. Or the
sources may be used carelessly.
-
The paper may rely too heavily on evidence
from published sources. Sections of the paper may be little more than
“data dumps,” sets of quotations strung together withlittle or no explanation.
-
The sources may
be inadequately or incorrectly interpreted.
All papers submitted in a college-level class should
be mechanically correct. Originality and creativity cannot compensate
for mechanical errors. A paper that is marked by stigmatized errors or
patterns of error can receive no more than a D.
The F Essay
The F (unacceptable) essay exhibits some of the weaknesses listed
below.
Content and Development
-
The F essay may not
follow the assignment.
-
The F essay may
ignore the rhetorical situation.
-
The F essay may
have no clear purpose or direction.
-
The F essay is
insufficiently developed and superficial. Typically, such
problems occur only when an essay either falls seriously short of
the minimum length requirements, or when the writer selects a topic
that is not appropriate for the assignment.
Organization
Style
-
The paper may be
unclear.
-
The sentence
structure may be consistently flawed.
-
The
vocabulary
may be offensive to the intended
audience.
Mechanics
Research and Documentation
(Certain assignments may not require
research and documentation. Disregard this category for such
assignments.)
-
The
paper may not use any sources, despite requirements in the
assignment.
-
The paper may be
nothing more than a “data dump,” a set of
quotations strung together
with no explanation.
-
The
essay may be intentionally or unintentionally
plagiarized.
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