Inclusive Curriculum and Assessment

Students Rubric

Team Version

Facilitator Guide (opens in new tab)

Inclusive Curriculum and Assessment provides the opportunity to learn about perspectives beyond one’s own experiences and elevates historically marginalized voices. It includes opportunities to learn about power, bias, and inequity and empowers learners to be agents of positive social change.  

Instructions: Meet with the other students that your school has asked to participate in the rubric pilot (check with your teacher if you are unsure of the other students to work with). Use the guiding questions below to estimate together where your class or classes fall overall on each element of the rubric. Be honest – this activity is most valuable as a learning experience. We recommend spending about 45 minutes on the rubric. Save your notes and ratings for future discussions.

Note: Your rubric responses are not saved until you click the Submit button at the bottom of this page. If you're not ready to submit yet, keep this page open. Closing the tab will not save your work.

Progression of Engagement

Exploring

Cultural Responsiveness is in its initial phase

Growing

Cultural Responsiveness is practiced in some situations  

Utilizing

Cultural Responsiveness is practiced in most situations 

Transforming

Cultural Responsiveness is continuously practiced and promoted

Commitments

The extent of school community members’ dedication to culturally responsive practices across the school experience

Commitments

Curriculum Contains Diverse Perspectives

Guiding Questions:

How diverse are the authors and resources we use in class? Which traditionally marginalized groups (e.g. African American, Latinx, LGBTQ+, students with disabilities, etc.) have we learned about? Are our own backgrounds represented, and do we get to talk about how we understand different perspectives from our own?

Exploring

We rarely use resources written by or about traditionally marginalized perspectives in our classes.

Growing

We sometimes use resources written by or about traditionally marginalized perspectives. 

Utilizing

We regularly use resources written by or about traditionally marginalized perspectives, with some also representing our backgrounds.

Transforming

We regularly use resources written by or about traditionally marginalized perspectives, with  some also representing our backgrounds, and we discuss how these perspectives add to our understanding.

Selected Rating: None
Commitments

Classroom Assessments Connect to Students' lives

Guiding Questions:

How relevant are our tests and assessments to our daily lives and cultures? Do we get to use experiences from our daily lives to show our teachers what we have learned in school?

Exploring

Our classroom assessments are rarely connected to our daily lives and/or culture.

Growing

Our classroom assessments sometimes provide us with opportunities to use our experiences from our daily lives and/or culture.  

Utilizing

Our classroom assessments regularly provide us with opportunities to use our experiences from our daily lives and/or culture. 

Transforming

Our classroom assessments are creative in the ways they provide us with opportunities to use our experiences from our daily lives and/or culture.  

Selected Rating: None
Commitments

Student Involvement in Data-Informed Decision-making

Guiding Questions:

How much do we understand about how our assessments influence the groups and classes we are placed in? Do our teachers talk to us about our test scores and why we are placed in certain groups? Do they work with us to set goals based on our assessment scores?

Exploring

We rarely see how the results from our assessments influence the groups and classes we are placed in.

Growing

We sometimes see how the results from assessments influence the groups and classes we are placed in.

Utilizing

We regularly see how results from assessments influence the groups and classes we are placed in.

Transforming

We regularly see how results from assessments influence the groups and classes we are placed in and we participate in goal setting as part of the process.

Selected Rating: None

Empowerment

School practices include all school community member voices

Empowerment

Curriculum Connects to Students’ Lives

Guiding Questions:

How much, and in what ways, do our teachers connect our class content to our daily lives? Are we able to make connections on our own? 

Exploring

Our teachers rarely connect our class content to our daily lives.

Growing

Our teachers sometimes connect our class content to our daily lives.

Utilizing

Our teachers regularly connect our class content to our daily lives.

Transforming

Our teachers regularly connect our class content to our daily lives and offer opportunities for us to make further connections.

Selected Rating: None
Empowerment

Authentic demonstrations of student learning

Guiding Questions:

What ways do we have to demonstrate our learning in our classes? Are we able to choose some different ways to show our teachers what we have learned (e.g. performances, presentations, experiments) or do our teachers only know this from our tests and quizzes?

Exploring

We have few ways to demonstrate our learning beyond tests.

Growing

We sometimes have ways to demonstrate our learning beyond tests.

Utilizing

We collaborate with our teachers to find ways to demonstrate our learning beyond tests.

Transforming

We can choose different ways to demonstrate our learning beyond tests, with our teachers’ support.

Selected Rating: None

Relationships

The quality of connections amongst school community members

Relationships

Student interests reflected in lessons

Guiding Questions:

Do our teachers incorporate our interests into class lessons? How often and in what ways?

Exploring

Our lessons don’t connect to our interests. 

Growing

Our teachers rarely incorporate our interests into lessons.

Utilizing

Our teachers sometimes incorporate our interests into lessons in ways that help us learn.

Transforming

Our teachers often incorporate our interests into lessons in ways that help us learn.

Selected Rating: None
Relationships

Local Field trips Connect to Community

Guiding Questions:

Do we take local field trips (e.g. museums, parks, cultural centers, other neighborhood locations) that help us learn about our community and local culture? How do our teachers help us make a connection between what we learn from our community and what we learn in school?

Exploring

We do not take local field trips that increase our understanding and connections to the community and local culture.

Growing

We rarely take local field trips that increase our understanding and connections to the community and local culture. 

Utilizing

We sometimes take local field trips that increase our understanding and connections to the community and local culture and our teacher connects these experiences to our lessons. 

Transforming

We sometimes take local field trips that increase our understanding and connections to the community and local culture and we work with our teachers to connect these experiences to our lessons.

Selected Rating: None

Collaboration

The extent of cooperation amongst school community members

Collaboration

Collaborative Projects

Guiding Questions:

How often do we have projects to demonstrate our learning over time? Are we involved in developing them? Are there some subjects or classes where this happens more often than others?

Exploring

We have few projects that allow us to demonstrate our learning over time. 

Growing

We rarely collaborate with our teachers to create meaningful projects that allow us to demonstrate our learning over time. 

Utilizing

We regularly collaborate with our teachers to create meaningful projects that allow us to demonstrate our learning over time. 

Transforming

We regularly collaborate with our teachers to create meaningful projects that allow us to demonstrate our learning over time and discuss them afterwards to improve future projects.

Selected Rating: None

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