Unit One: Informed Citizens Debate The Death Penalty

Appendices

Unit 1 Appendix: Group Work Roles 

As many of you know, the selec­tion of group com­po­si­tion can be a dif­fi­cult task. Depending on the dynam­ics of your class, you may decide to have the stu­dents select their own groups. If you choose this approach, make sure that stu­dents under­stand the respon­si­bil­i­ties of each group mem­ber, as well as the col­lec­tive respon­si­bil­i­ties of the group. Groups may also be select­ed ran­dom­ly, or com­posed by you. The lat­ter is our sug­ges­tion, giv­en the com­plex­i­ty of the group dynam­ics for this unit. Given the open-end­ed nature of the research and role-play sim­u­la­tion, teacher guid­ance is of the utmost importance.

Logistics of group work: Emphasize that this is a coop­er­a­tive endeav­or, where indi­vid­ual opin­ions should be respect­ed — the stu­dents are act­ing as a cit­i­zen research team.

Have the groups iden­ti­fy roles that each mem­ber will play (roles may be dou­bled up, with excep­tion of the role of the facil­i­ta­tor — only one per­son should hold this role):

  • Speaker (the pri­ma­ry, although not the only, pre­sen­ter of the group research; par­tic­i­pates in the team)
  • Facilitator (keeps the group on task, focus­es ques­tions, over­sees issues of qual­i­ty and time man­age­ment; respon­si­ble for indi­vid­ual and group assessment)
  • Writer (coor­di­nates the writ­ten work of research and the pro­duc­tion of the final group brief to be pre­sent­ed to the team — there may be two, if dis­sent­ing opinions emerge)
  • Visual pro­duc­ers (coor­di­nates and pro­duces the visu­al prod­uct high­light­ing the major points of their groupâs position/​research on the propo­si­tion on poster board or PowerPoint

Note: This divi­sion of labor can be used through­out the year if you uti­lize group work fre­quent­ly in your class, so that before the end of the year every­one will assume one of these roles dur­ing some research or group project.



Unit 1 Appendix: Research Report Grading Rubrics 


Rubric for Group Facilitator 

You are the leader of your group. Your pri­ma­ry respon­si­bil­i­ty is to ensure that all group mem­bers are involved, and that the var­i­ous parts of the project are com­plet­ed and on time. You will be grad­ed on the following criteria:

Outstanding (4.0)

  • All eval­u­a­tions done dai­ly and thoughtfully
  • All com­po­nents are com­plet­ed ahead of time and are exceptional
  • Group mem­bers are all involved at your urging
  • Group con­flict is man­aged pro­duc­tive­ly, and dif­fer­ent opin­ions are expressed and respecte

Satisfactory (3.0)

  • Most eval­u­a­tions done some are less thought­ful than others
  • Most com­po­nents are com­plet­ed on time
  • Some mem­bers are allowed to opt-out occasionally
  • Group con­flict is min­i­mized but some opin­ions are not heard or recognized

Unsatisfactory (2.0 – 0.0)

  • Most eval­u­a­tions missing
  • Parts of project are miss­ing and you make no effort to fix it
  • One or two peo­ple do all the work
  • Group is out of con­trol, and you make lit­tle or no effort to bring it to order

Rubric for Group Presenter 

You are the pre­sen­ter for your group. You will be respon­si­ble for mak­ing your groupâs case to the leg­isla­tive hear­ing. You will be grad­ed by the following criteria:

Outstanding (4.0)

  • Attention-get­ting intro­duc­tion (cre­ative)
  • Presentation is seam­less with few stops to check notes
  • At least three arguments made
  • Persuasive con­clu­sion
  • Answers all ques­tions clear­ly and thoughtfully

Satisfactory (3.0)

  • Basic intro­duc­tion of group case (sim­ply stat­ing the group proposition)
  • Some stum­bling spots, checking notes
  • One or two arguments made
  • Basic sum­ma­ry conclusion
  • Has dif­fi­cul­ty answer­ing clear­ly, or answers none at all

Unsatisfactory (2.0 – 0.0)

  • Missing or late for presentation
  • Incoherent pre­sen­ta­tion
  • No clear supporting arguments
  • No clear conclusion
  • Does not answer questions

Rubric for Visual Product 

You are to pre­pare a visu­al prod­uct to sup­port your presenter(s) when they make their case to the leg­isla­tive hear­ing. The fol­low­ing standards apply:

Outstanding (4.0)

  • Visually rep­re­sents three or more arguments
  • Neat, attrac­tive and creative
  • Uses col­or and pictures

Satisfactory (3.0)

  • Visually rep­re­sents one or two arguments
  • Neat and attractive
  • Uses col­or effectively

Unsatisfactory (2.0 – 0.0)

  • Little or no visu­al rep­re­sen­ta­tion of arguments
  • Messy, no effort evident
  • Little or no col­or or pictures used

Rubric for Written Statement of Position 

Your group should pre­pare one doc­u­ment that explains and sup­ports your posi­tion on this top­ic. If your group can­not come to con­sen­sus on one side or the oth­er, you should pre­pare two sep­a­rate papers — have one per­son from each side write a sep­a­rate posi­tion paper. The fol­low­ing standards apply:

Outstanding (4.0)

  • More than one full page
  • Clearly stat­ed and reasoned position
  • Three dif­fer­ent arguments
  • Recognizes and refutes opposing argument
  • Paper is well written
  • No spelling or grammar errors

Satisfactory (3.0)

  • One full page
  • Clearly stat­ed position
  • One or two arguments
  • Recognizes oppo­si­tion
  • Paper meets min. standards
  • One or two mistakes

Unsatisfactory (2.0 – 0.0)

  • Less than one full page
  • Position is not clear
  • No sup­port
  • No respect­ful treat­ment of opposition
  • Paper is incoherent
  • Many mis­takes


Appendix: Group Work Evaluation 

Group Facilitator _____________________

Date_​_​_​_​_​_​_​

Group MemberAssigned RoleTask CompletedGrade
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Group Grade Average: ________________

Grading Rubric:

(If any­thing oth­er than a 3.0 is giv­en — either a 4.0 or under a 3.0 — the group leader is required to give an expla­na­tion for this on the com­ment sec­tion of this form.)

  • 4.0 Student coop­er­at­ed ful­ly, or respectfully/​productively dis­agreed, with group and leader, per­formed assigned tasks, found nec­es­sary infor­ma­tion as well as addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion and could explain it.
  • 3.0 Student coop­er­at­ed ful­ly with group leader, per­formed assigned tasks and found necessary information.
  • 2.0 Student required reminders to get to work, found only the nec­es­sary infor­ma­tion, and com­plet­ed only the min­i­mum assigned tasks.
  • 1.0 Student com­plet­ed assigned tasks after exten­sive pres­sure or teacher involvement.
  • 0.0 Student was unco­op­er­a­tive and unproductive.

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