The New Sat Rubric
The New Sat Rubric
The New Sat Rubric
demonstrates little or no cohesion and limited skill in the use and control of language.
may lack a clear central claim or controlling idea or may deviate from the claim or idea
over the course of the response.
may include an ineffective introduction and/or conclusion. The response may
demonstrate some progression of ideas within paragraphs but not throughout the
response.
has limited variety in sentence structures; sentence structures may be repetitive The
response demonstrates general or vague word choice; word choice may be repetitive.
The response may deviate noticeably from a formal style and objective tone.
shows a limited control of the conventions of standard written English and contains
errors that detract from the quality of writing and may impede understanding.
demonstrates little or no cohesion and inadequate skill in the use and control of
language.
may lack a clear central claim or controlling idea.
lacks a recognizable introduction and conclusion. The response does not have a
discernible progression of ideas.
lacks variety in sentence structures; sentence structures may be repetitive. The response
demonstrates general and vague word choice; word choice may be poor or inaccurate.
The response may lack a formal style and objective tone.
shows a weak control of the conventions of standard written English and may contain
numerous errors that undermine the quality of writing.
PROFICIENT
PARTIAL
INADEQUATE
WRITING
ANALYSIS
READING
On an actual S.A.T. essay, students receive three separate scores, one each for Reading, Analysis, This papers score is:
and Writing. A score, for example, might be 433, which would show Advanced Reading, Proficient
Analysis, and Proficient Writing. Two readers evaluate each essay and their scores are added together,
creating the final score which is reported as a number between 28 for each of the three categories.