Criteria explained
To understand grading you have to understand what our goal is in putting
together The New Humanities Reader. We're interested in helping
to foster your ability to make connections--to think synthetically--and
we want you to stake out informed, nuanced positions on the most pressing
issues of the day. Whether you agree with Drucker or Abram or Tannen or
any of the other authors we've included in the reader is not what's important
to us; what matters to us is what you can do with the materials
you've read. Those writers who can do more with what they've read end
up receiving better grades. Believe it or not, it's that simple.
What can you do with the assigned readings?
We think every student entering college should be able to read and understand
the essays included in The New Humanities Reader. This, then, is
our base line for measuring performance.
A passing performance: here, the writer is able to accurately
represent the positions in the assigned readings and can offer one or
more fairly straightforward observations about the readings. More often
than not, writers at this level stick to generalities--"It's important
to protect the environment" or "I agree with Gladwell that context
plays a big role in how we understand things."
A higher than average performance: here, the writer moves beyond
accurate summary and the tentative formation of a project to critical
engagement with the readings, explaining why certain positions are maintained
and what consequences follow from adopting one position over another.
The focus is less on establishing that the author has read the essays
with understanding and more on demonstrating that the essays are being
put to use by the student writer to ask a question, pursue a theory, or
stake out a new position.
An excellent performance: here, the writer critically engages
not just with the assigned readings, but with the assignment itself and
the issues it raises. The essay form is used to explore an issue, question,
or problem in detail and the result is a carefully argued, nuanced assessment
of the student's position. Passing papers tend to make connections using
the word "and," better than average and excellent papers tend
to make connections that qualify and complicate the issue, using words
such as "but," "if," "possibly," and "however."
Whether you are considering our suggested grading criteria in all its
detail or at the highly condensed version of it that we've just provided
above, you are bound to find the whole issue of what grades represent
largely abstract until you look at some real student papers. In the pages
that follow, we provide examples of actual papers written in our program
and we offer explanations for why the papers have been assessed as they
have.
And so, without further ado, we invite you to consider the work a C paper
does and does not do.
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