name: rubric-generator description: > Builds complete, standards-aligned, student-facing rubrics for any assignment, project, essay, presentation, lab report, discussion, or performance task. Trigger this skill whenever the user wants to create a rubric, needs to assess student work, asks how to grade something fairly, wants to build a scoring guide, needs to align an assignment to standards, asks about performance criteria, or wants a tool to give students before they begin an assignment. Also trigger when the user says "build me a rubric for this", "how should I grade this assignment?", "I need criteria for this project", "make a scoring guide", or "how do I make this rubric student- friendly?" Works with pasted assignment descriptions, uploaded .docx files, or verbal descriptions of what students are expected to produce.
Rubric Generator
Purpose
Build rubrics that do two things simultaneously: give teachers a fair, consistent scoring guide and give students a transparent roadmap for producing quality work. The best rubrics are instructional tools first and assessment tools second — students who study a rubric carefully before starting an assignment should have a significant advantage over students who don't.
Rubric design philosophy: Criteria should describe what students do, not what teachers want. Language should be specific enough that students can self-assess, peer-assess, and use the rubric as a revision guide.
What You Need From the User
Gather before generating. Ask for anything missing:
- Assignment description (required): What are students producing?
- Grade level and subject
- Standards alignment: Are there specific Common Core, NGSS, state, or local standards this should address?
- Rubric format preference:
- Analytic (separate criteria scored independently — most diagnostic)
- Holistic (one overall score with a descriptor — fastest to use)
- Single-point (describes proficiency only; teacher notes above/below)
- Point scale: 4-point (1–4), percentage-based (100%), or a specific scale the user specifies
- Audience: Teacher-only scoring guide or student-facing rubric? (If student-facing, language must be directly accessible)
Default: Analytic rubric, 4-point scale, student-facing language, no specific format requested.
Rubric Types
Analytic Rubric (Default)
Multiple criteria, each scored independently. Most useful for:
- Complex, multi-component assignments
- When diagnostic feedback matters (e.g., "strong argument but weak evidence")
- Assignments where students need to understand which component to revise
Format:
| Criteria | 4 — Exceeds | 3 — Meets | 2 — Approaching | 1 — Beginning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [Criterion 1] | [descriptor] | [descriptor] | [descriptor] | [descriptor] |
| [Criterion 2] | [descriptor] | [descriptor] | [descriptor] | [descriptor] |
Holistic Rubric
One score based on overall quality. Most useful for:
- Quick, formative assessment
- First drafts or early performance tasks
- Situations where the whole is more important than the parts
Format:
| Score | Descriptor |
|---|---|
| 4 | [What an exceptional response looks like — multiple specific features] |
| 3 | [What a proficient response looks like] |
| 2 | [What a developing response looks like] |
| 1 | [What a beginning response looks like] |
Single-Point Rubric
Describes only the proficient level. Most useful for:
- Student-centered assessment cultures where growth mindset matters
- When you want to avoid students "aiming for the 3"
- Quick, focused feedback
Format:
| Area for Growth | Proficient — Criteria | Strength/Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| [Notes below standard] | [Criterion 1 — proficient descriptor] | [Notes above standard] |
| [Notes below standard] | [Criterion 2 — proficient descriptor] | [Notes above standard] |
(Teacher writes in the left and right columns during scoring.)
Criteria Selection Protocol
For every assignment, identify 3–6 criteria. More than 6 criteria makes the rubric unwieldy and signals the assignment may be too broad.
Criteria selection by assignment type:
Argumentative / Analytical Essay
| Criterion | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Thesis / Claim | Clarity, specificity, arguability of central argument |
| Evidence | Quality, relevance, and quantity of textual/research support |
| Analysis / Commentary | Depth of connection between evidence and claim |
| Organization | Logical structure, transitions, paragraph coherence |
| Conventions | Grammar, spelling, punctuation, citation format |
| Voice / Style (optional) | Sophistication, precision, and appropriateness of word choice |
Research Project / Presentation
| Criterion | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Content Knowledge | Accuracy, depth, and relevance of information presented |
| Source Quality | Credibility, variety, and appropriate use of sources |
| Organization | Logical sequence, clear introduction and conclusion |
| Delivery / Presentation | Eye contact, pacing, volume, engagement with audience |
| Visual Aids | Clarity, accuracy, and support for spoken content |
| Time Management | Meets time requirements; neither rushed nor overlong |
Lab Report / Science Investigation
| Criterion | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Hypothesis | Testable, specific, connected to background knowledge |
| Procedure | Replicable, controlled, safe |
| Data Collection | Accurate, organized, labeled, units included |
| Analysis | Correct interpretation of data; patterns identified |
| Conclusion | Connected to hypothesis; explains results; considers error |
| Scientific Writing | Objective voice, precise vocabulary, correct conventions |
Creative / Narrative Writing
| Criterion | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Narrative Focus | Clear, sustained central idea or story |
| Development | Characters, setting, conflict developed with detail |
| Structure | Beginning, middle, end with intentional pacing |
| Craft and Style | Purposeful word choice, sentence variety, voice |
| Conventions | Grammar, spelling, punctuation serve the writing |
Discussion / Seminar Participation
| Criterion | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Content Knowledge | Uses textual evidence; demonstrates preparation |
| Quality of Contribution | Advances discussion; introduces new ideas |
| Active Listening | Responds to peers; builds on others' ideas |
| Respectful Discourse | Professional, inclusive communication |
| Frequency | Contributes meaningfully [X] or more times |
Descriptor Language Standards
What makes rubric descriptors work:
✅ Specific and observable: "Includes at least 3 pieces of textual evidence, each with a direct quote and a page number" not "uses good evidence"
✅ Distinguishable across levels: A student should be able to clearly see which level describes their work and understand why
✅ Student-authored-feeling: Descriptors read as "what you did" not "what the teacher expects"
✅ Growth-oriented at lower levels: Level 1 and 2 descriptors name what is present, not just what is missing:
- ❌ "Lacks a clear thesis"
- ✅ "Thesis is present but states a topic rather than a specific, arguable claim"
✅ Parallel structure across levels: If Level 4 says "3 or more pieces of evidence," Level 3 says "2 pieces of evidence," not something structurally different
Point Values and Grade Conversion
After generating the rubric, offer a grade conversion table if the user wants one:
4-point scale (4 criteria):
Total possible: 16 points
16 = 100% A+
14–15 = 90–99% A
12–13 = 80–89% B
10–11 = 70–79% C
8–9 = 60–69% D
Below 8 = Below 60% F
Adjust the table based on the number of criteria and the user's grading scale.
Weighting: If the user wants certain criteria weighted more heavily (e.g., thesis worth 2x, conventions worth 0.5x), build a weighted version with clear multipliers.
Student-Facing Additions
When the rubric is student-facing, add:
Pre-Assignment Self-Check
BEFORE YOU SUBMIT — CHECK YOUR WORK:
□ [Criterion 1]: Does my work do [specific description of proficient level]?
□ [Criterion 2]: Does my work do [specific description of proficient level]?
□ [Criterion 3]: Does my work do [specific description of proficient level]?
□ [Criterion 4]: Does my work do [specific description of proficient level]?
Peer Review Prompt
2–3 sentence prompts for structured peer feedback using the rubric:
"Using the rubric, give your partner feedback on their [criterion]. Identify one specific moment in their work that shows [criterion quality] and one place where they could strengthen it."
Standards Alignment
If the user provides standards codes or asks for alignment, map each criterion to its standard:
| Criterion | Standard | Standard Language (abbreviated) |
|---|---|---|
| Thesis / Claim | CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.1a | "Introduce precise claims..." |
| Evidence | CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.1b | "Develop claims with evidence..." |
| [etc.] | [etc.] | [etc.] |
Common standards banks: CCSS ELA, CCSS Math, NGSS, WIDA (ELL), C3 Framework (Social Studies). Ask user to specify if standards alignment is needed.
Quality Check Before Finalizing
- 3–6 criteria (not more)
- Descriptors are specific and observable at every level
- A student could self-assess with this rubric without teacher explanation
- Level descriptors are clearly distinguishable from each other
- Lower-level descriptors name what IS present, not only what is missing
- Criteria are parallel in structure
- Language is accessible for the target grade level
- Point values and grade conversion are clear
- Pre-assignment self-check is included (if student-facing)