‹ A New Life (unit home)
Assessment Pack

Assessment Pack

In PBL, assessment happens during the process, not only at the end. This pack has three printable tools: a student solution rubric, a peer/self group-work form (individual accountability), and a teacher problem-quality rubric for when you write your own units.

1 · Student solution rubric (the 8-part brief)

Score the group's problem/solution brief. Aligned to §113.16(c)(26)(B) and (c)(23)(G,H).

Criterion4 · Strong2 · Developing
Problem definedNames the real problem and whom it affects, from a stakeholder's view.Restates the story without finding the problem.
Options weighedConsiders more than one option with advantages & disadvantages.Jumps to one answer; no alternatives.
Evidence & researchUses facts from more than one source; questions credibility.Little evidence, or one source only.
Solution & reasoningRecommends a solution and explains the reasoning; open to more than one right path.Solution stated without reasons.
PerspectiveShows the problem from more than one stakeholder's point of view.Single point of view only.
CommunicationClear, organized, and covers all 8 parts.Disorganized or missing parts.
EvaluateExplains how they'd know if the solution worked.No way to check the solution.

2 · Group-work: peer & self assessment

Each student fills one out for every group member and for themselves. This protects individual accountability inside collaborative work. Mark: strongly disagree · disagree · agree · strongly agree.

#This person…
1Takes part in group activities (present and on time).
2Finishes their assigned jobs on time.
3Comes ready, having done the reading or research.
4Listens well to others.
5Contributes to the discussion — without dominating it.
6Brings new and relevant information.
7Uses good sources for research.
8Gives logical ideas and reasons.
9Asks questions that deepen the group's thinking.
10Communicates ideas clearly.
11Helps the group work better together.

Overall rating: Excellent · Good · OK (some areas to improve) · Major improvement needed.

Two short reflections: (1) How does this person most help the group's learning? (2) What change would improve the group's learning?

Adapted for Grade 5 from Deb Allen, University of Delaware (2000), “Assessment of Individual Performance in Groups.”

3 · Teacher tool: PBL problem-quality rubric

Use this when you design your own PST units — it checks that a problem is worth teaching. Score 4 (ideal) → 1 (revise).

Criterion4 · Ideal
Realism / relevanceBased on a real or realistic situation, understandable and relevant to learners.
ContentAddresses significant concepts and objectives; relates directly to course outcomes.
EngagementHas a “hook”; its presentation stimulates discussion and inquiry.
ComplexityAppropriately challenging; needs group cooperation; some ambiguity; integrates multiple concepts.
StructureDiscloses information in stages; builds on existing student knowledge.
QuestionsFew, short, open-ended; push for deeper understanding (not yes/no).
SolutionOpen to multiple answers or paths, depending on students' assumptions and reasoning.
ResearchPromotes substantive research using multiple resources.

Adapted from “Rubric to Evaluate PBL Problems,” © ITUE Leaders 2004, updated 2019 (itue.udel.edu).

‹ Facilitator guide Unit home