Scientifically Physics Perspective
Grading Rubric for Media Project Essay Question
It is the intent of the essay question to show that you have considered the needs of life in light
of scientific principles learned in class, in real life, and possibly in a movie. You need to
demonstrate knowledge of the subject matter, reasoning skills, and writing skills appropriate to
college level courses. As such, you will be expected to answer the essay question as outlined
below and you will be graded according to the rubrics given below.
1. You need to have an introductory statement that agrees or disagrees with the question
given and is supportable by facts. This is worth up to 5 points in the following manner:
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point
Statement is well phrased, shows significant thought, spelling and grammar correct.
Statement is well phrased, shows thought, spelling and grammar correct.
Statement is somewhat well phrased, shows some thought, spelling and grammar correct.
Statement is poorly phrased, shows some thought, minor spelling/grammar error present.
Statement is poorly phrased, shows little or no thought, spelling and/or grammar errors present.
A score of zero will be given when no introductory statement is included that indicates how you
will answer the question.
2. Supply five (5) supporting reasons for your statement given in the format of sentences.
These reasons can be from course materials (notes, discussion, and text), real‐life
examples not specifically used in class, or examples given in the movie. This is not
intended to be a movie review and no credit will be given for opinions of this nature.
Each of these statements will be graded out of 5 points, for a total of 25 points for this
portion. Basically, each sentence should show knowledge of the subject matter, provide
support for your conclusion, and show mastery of written English.
Five statements graded as follows:
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point 0 points
Reason is valid and thoughtful
Reason, while valid, is simple
Reason, while valid, is simple
Reason is valid
Reason is not valid.
No statement given.
Reason fully supports conclusion
Reason supports conclusion
Reasonably supports conclusion
Minor relationship to conclusion
Does not support conclusion
College level English used
Correct spelling and
Correct spelling and
Minor errors in spelling
Errors in spelling
grammar used
grammar used
and/or grammar
and/or grammar
Any of the reasons that apply to your statement will constitute a grade of points given. For
example, a valid, well thought out reason with major spelling/grammar errors will be scored as
1 point. A really good reason that contradicts your conclusion will also score 1 point. You are
required to give five (5) supporting reasons for your conclusion. If you give only 4 reasons (or
less), you will receive a score of zero for each missing statement. Don’t confuse me by
combining reasons that you want to be treated separately. I will count them as a single reason.
You must submit the completed essay in a .doc or .docx format on Canvas.
An example is shown here so that you can see what I mean. My grading comments are in red.
The Day the Earth Stood
Still
G This movie explores the “zoo hypothesis” that aliens are watching us and waiting to intervene. What evidence can you provide to show that this is or is not true?
There is no evidence to support that aliens are watching us or waiting to intervene in our affairs
on Earth. (5 point statement. This is an introductory statement that is based on the question
asked and will be supported by reasons given.) Observation at any level requires the use of
energy which will have an accompanying signal which we are likely to detect. (5 point variety
reason in support of statement) Many problems have happened before and aliens didn’t come
to fix them. (4 points since this is fairly simple, could you be specific?) Paranoia about aliens is
common. (3 points since this only reasonably supports the conclusion. If aliens are watching,
this is not paranoia.) We would be able to detect aliens that watch us. (2 points since this does
not actually support the conclusion as there is no way to prove this.) This common myth is like
all cons;pirasy theoeries. Sicne I can’t prove it wron, it must be right. (1 point. This is a valid
statement, and could be worth 5 points, but is so riddled with spelling and grammar errors that
it does not represent college level work.)
Notice some things that are NOT HERE:
1. The essay is exactly 6 sentences. More is not better. You do not need more for full
credit and it can work to your detriment.
2. There is no conclusion statement. You cannot substitute this for a reason statement,
and I have not forgotten what you were writing about in the last 6 sentences.
3. You may wish to reference a document, but this is not required. If you choose this, use
in‐text citations.