 |
Sample Item
Brief Constructed Response Item for Grade 5
|
Standard 3.0 Knowledge of Measurement |
Topic C. Applications in Measurement
|
Indicator 2. Calculate equivalent measurements |
|
Objective b. Determine equivalent units of measurement
Assessment limit: Use seconds, minutes, and hours or pints, quarts, and gallons
|
|
Tonya's dad is making a concrete patio in their backyard. Concrete is made from cement, sand, gravel and water. It takes twice as much sand as cement to make the concrete mix.
Tonya's dad used 3 gallons of sand in the mix.
Step A
How many quarts of cement did he use?
Step B
Explain how you found your answer. Use what you know about measurement in your explanation. Use words, numbers and/or symbols in your explanation.
Step A is scored 0 (Incorrect) or 1 (Correct) and assesses 3.C.2.b.
Step B is scored with a 3 point (0, 1, 2) rubric and assesses Processes of Mathematics.
|
| Correct Answer |
Step A 6 quarts |
| Answer Annotation |
Sample correct response: He used half as much cement as sand. One half of 3 gallons is 1 gallons. Each gallon is 4 quarts. A gallon would be of 4 quarts or 2 quarts. So 1 gallons is 4 quarts plus 2 quarts which is 6 quarts. |
Brief Constructed Response (BCR) Rubric |
| Print: Scoring Rubric |
|
Score 2
The response demonstrates a complete understanding and analysis of a problem.
- Application of a reasonable strategy in the context of the problem is indicated.
- Explanation1 of and/or justification2 for the mathematical process(es) used to solve a problem is clear, developed, and logical.
- Connections and/or extensions made within mathematics or outside of mathematics are clear.
- Supportive information and/or numbers are provided as appropriate. 3
Score 1
The response demonstrates a minimal understanding and analysis of a problem.
- Partial application of a strategy in the context of the problem is indicated.
- Explanation1 of and/or justification2 for the mathematical process(es) used to solve a problem is partially developed, logically flawed, or missing.
- Connections and/or extensions made within mathematics or outside of mathematics are partial or overly general, or flawed.
- Supportive information and/or numbers may or may not be provided as appropriate.3
Score 0
The response is completely incorrect, irrelevant to the problem, or missing.4
Note 1: Explanation refers to students' ability to communicate how they arrived at the solution for an item using the language of mathematics.
Note 2: Justification refers to students' ability to support the reasoning used to solve a problem, or to demonstrate why the solution is correct using mathematical concepts and principles.
Note 3: Students need to complete rubric criteria for explanation, justification, connections and/or extensions as cued for in a given problem.
Note 4: Merely an exact copy or paraphrase of the problem will receive a score of "0".
Rubric Document Date: August 2003
/share/rubrics/msa/mathematics/xml/bcr.xml
|
/toolkit/vsc/assessment_items/msa_math_5_018.xml