State of New Jersey Department of Education

Scoring Rubrics

Rubrics - SCORING STUDENT RESPONSES Rubric with Analytic Components

According to Webster's: rubric, n. 5. An authoritative direction or rule.

Scoring rubrics provide the criteria for evaluating and scoring student performance. There is an item specific rubric supplied for each Open-Ended item in mathematics. These item specific rubrics are based upon the generic mathematics rubric and are developed by a committee of mathematicians and teachers. Rubrics ensure that there is consistency, fairness, and accuracy in scoring open-ended questions.

Holistic Scoring Guide for Mathematics Open-Ended (OE) Items
(Generic Rubric)

3 - Point Response
The response shows complete understanding of the problem's essential mathematical concepts. The student executes procedures completely and gives relevant responses to all parts of the task. The response contains few minor errors, if any. The response contains a clear, effective explanation detailing how the problem was solved so that the reader does not need to infer how and why decisions were made.

2 - Point Response
The response shows nearly complete understanding of the problem's essential mathematical concepts. The student executes nearly all procedures and gives relevant responses to most parts of the task. The response may have minor errors. The explanation detailing how the problem was solved may not be clear, causing the reader to make some inferences.

1 - Point Response
The response shows limited understanding of the problem's essential mathematical concepts. The response and procedures may be incomplete and/or may contain major errors. An incomplete explanation of how the problem was solved may contribute to questions as to how and why decisions were made.

0 - Point Response
The response shows insufficient understanding of the problem's essential mathematical concepts. The procedures, if any, contain major errors. There may be no explanation of the solution or the reader may not be able to understand the explanation. The reader may not be able to understand how and why decisions were made.