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WebQuest |
Name(s): | |
Topic and Grade Level(s): |
Essential Characteristics | Points |
A-Off |
B-Off | C-Off | D-Off |
WebQuest Rubric | 30 |
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Storyboard and WebQuest proposal |
5 |
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Presentation/Demonstration
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5 |
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20 |
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WebQuest Evaluations
(expected) |
* |
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Internet Evaluation Filtration
Guide (expected) |
* |
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Proximity, Alignment,
Repetition, Contrast |
* |
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* |
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Ease of Navigation - single clicking to move through
pages versus scrolling |
* |
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Technical difficulty
of development/ Sophisticated use* |
10 |
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5 |
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Total Possible Score - Total Points Lost | 75 |
Student Name | Pages Created | Your personal website for the entire webquest | |
A |
http:// .tripod.com/ | ||
B |
http:// .tripod.com/ | ||
C | http:// .tripod.com/ | ||
D | http:// .tripod.com/ |
#A |
#B |
#C |
#D |
Write web page the effect
was first used: |
#A |
#B |
#C |
#D |
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Image map | PDF printable worksheet | ||||||||
Background image | Book covers linked to Amazon/BN reviews | ||||||||
Alt Labels-All Images | Rubric created at http://rubistar.4teachers.org/ | ||||||||
Flash buttons | Created Quiz, Crossword Puzzle, or Puzzlemaker | ||||||||
Sound clip | Titles/graphics created or modified in Photoshop | ||||||||
Video clip | Creation of a transparent animated gif | ||||||||
Use of tables | Graphical links/anchors |
WebQuest Rubric (Partial Score)
The first part of the rubric for this lesson can be found at http://edweb.sdsu.edu/webquest/webquestrubric.html.
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Overall Aesthetics (This refers to the WebQuest page itself, not the external resources linked to it.) | ||||
Overall visual appeal |
0 points Background is gray. There are few or no graphic elements. No variation in layout or typography. OR Color is garish and/or typographic variations are overused and legibility suffers. |
1 point There are a few graphic elements. There is some variation in type size, color, and layout.
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2 points Appealing graphic elements are included appropriately. Differences in type size and/or color are used well.
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Introduction | ||||
Motivational effectiveness of Introduction |
0 points Introduction is purely factual, with no appeal to relevance or social importance. |
1 point Introduction relates somewhat to the learner's interests and/or describes a compelling question or problem. |
2 points The Introduction draws the reader into the lesson by relating to the learner's interests or goals and/or engagingly describing a compelling question or problem. |
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Cognitive effectiveness of the Introduction |
0 points Introduction doesn't prepare the reader for what is to come, or build on what the learner already knows. |
1 point Introduction makes some reference to learner's prior knowledge and previews to some extent what the lesson is about. |
2 points The Introduction builds on learner's prior knowledge by explicitly mentioning important concepts or principles, and effectively prepares the learner for the lesson by foreshadowing new concepts and principles. |
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Task (The task is the end result of student efforts... not the steps involved in getting there.) | ||||
Cognitive level of the task |
0 points Task requires simply comprehending web pages and answering questions. |
3 points Task requires analysis of information and/or putting together information from several sources. |
6 points Task requires synthesis of multiple sources of information, and/or taking a position, and/or going beyond the data given and making a generalization or creative product. |
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Technical sophistication of task |
0 points Task requires simple verbal or written response. |
1 point Task requires use of word processing or simple presentation software. |
2 points Task requires use of multimedia software, video, or conferencing. |
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Process (The process is the step-by-step description of how students will accomplish the task.) | ||||
Clarity of Process |
0 points Process is not clearly stated. Students would not know exactly what they were supposed to do just from reading this. |
1 point Some directions are given, but there is missing information. Students might be confused. |
2 points Every step is clearly stated. Most students would know exactly where they were in the process and what to do next. |
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Richness of process |
0 points Few steps, no separate roles assigned. |
3 points Some separate tasks or roles assigned. More complex activities required. |
6 points Lots of variety in the activities performed. Different roles and perspectives are taken. |
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Resources (Note: you should evaluate all resources linked to the page, even if they are in sections other than the Resources block. Also note that books, video and other offline resources can and should be used where appropriate.) | ||||
Quantity of resources |
0 points Few online resources used. |
1 point Moderate number of resources used. |
2 points Many resources provided, including off-line resources. |
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Quality of resources |
0 points Links are mundane. They lead to information that could be found in a classroom encyclopedia. |
2 point Some links carry information not ordinarily found in a classroom. |
4 points Links make excellent use of the Web's timeliness and colorfulness. |
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Evaluation | ||||
Clarity of Evaluation Criteria |
0 points Students have no idea on how they'll be judged. |
1 point Criteria for success are at least partially described. |
2 points Criteria for gradations of success are clearly stated, perhaps in the form of a rubric for self-, peer-, or teacher use. |
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Partial Score |
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This is Version 1.01. Last updated January 18, 1998 by Bernie Dodge.