informational essay rubric 6th grade

6th grade informative writing rubric

Offer 6th Grade students a standards-aligned structure for informative writing with this educator-developed rubric for Feedback Studio.

Turnitin Teaching and Learning Innovations Team

Offer 6th grade students a standards-aligned structure for assignments focused on the defense of a position on a topic.

Rubric suitable for formative and summative assignments with tasks involving the explanation of a topic. Use this rubric when asking students to explain information about a topic, to compare and contrast features, to discuss the benefits and limitations of something, etc. Consider using the 6th-8th Grade Informative QuickMark set with this rubric. These drag-and-drop comments were tailor-made by veteran educators to give actionable, formative feedback directly to students. While they were explicitly aligned to this particular rubric, you can edit or add your own content to any QuickMark.

This rubric is available and ready to use in your Feedback Studio account. However, if you would like to customize its criteria, you can "Duplicate this rubric" in your Feedback Studio account and then edit the rubric as needed. Or, you can download this .rbc file and then import to your account to begin editing the content.

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Sixth Grade Informational Writing Rubric

6th gr.Informative.Rubric.doc

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Essay Rubric

Essay Rubric

About this printout

This rubric delineates specific expectations about an essay assignment to students and provides a means of assessing completed student essays.

Teaching with this printout

More ideas to try.

Grading rubrics can be of great benefit to both you and your students. For you, a rubric saves time and decreases subjectivity. Specific criteria are explicitly stated, facilitating the grading process and increasing your objectivity. For students, the use of grading rubrics helps them to meet or exceed expectations, to view the grading process as being “fair,” and to set goals for future learning. In order to help your students meet or exceed expectations of the assignment, be sure to discuss the rubric with your students when you assign an essay. It is helpful to show them examples of written pieces that meet and do not meet the expectations. As an added benefit, because the criteria are explicitly stated, the use of the rubric decreases the likelihood that students will argue about the grade they receive. The explicitness of the expectations helps students know exactly why they lost points on the assignment and aids them in setting goals for future improvement.

  • Routinely have students score peers’ essays using the rubric as the assessment tool. This increases their level of awareness of the traits that distinguish successful essays from those that fail to meet the criteria. Have peer editors use the Reviewer’s Comments section to add any praise, constructive criticism, or questions.
  • Alter some expectations or add additional traits on the rubric as needed. Students’ needs may necessitate making more rigorous criteria for advanced learners or less stringent guidelines for younger or special needs students. Furthermore, the content area for which the essay is written may require some alterations to the rubric. In social studies, for example, an essay about geographical landforms and their effect on the culture of a region might necessitate additional criteria about the use of specific terminology.
  • After you and your students have used the rubric, have them work in groups to make suggested alterations to the rubric to more precisely match their needs or the parameters of a particular writing assignment.
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informational essay rubric 6th grade

  • Mar 24, 2021

Essays in 6th Grade: A Basic Format that Elevates the Standard 5-Paragraph Structure

informational essay rubric 6th grade

6th grade is such a funny year. Funny haha and funny weird. Student writing levels are all over the map. You will have students coming to you writing on a very elementary level, still needing loads of help with grammar and paragraph formation. Then, you will have students ready to write critique pieces and analyses. How do you navigate this? Read to find out more!

Give Them a Format...to Start

I've learned that 6th graders still need format . They still need structure. They still need checklists. As much as I loathe limiting them in this way, I think it is very reassuring to them. That's not to say you can't tweak for the strong writers, but I do still feel they need it.

For my students in particular, I like to let them dabble in looser formats of non-fiction writing in other ways. They do book reviews , a debate , podcasting , etc. They are offered choices in reading responses to non-fiction reading and analysis, too. My classes actually write digital eBooks, too. But on the whole, they are expected to write two essays with a very similar format twice a year.

Bye-Bye 5-Paragraph Essay

Alright, so this is kind of not totally true. My students do end up writing 5 paragraphs, but that typical structure we all commonly know, I navigate away from. I think it's a fine format, but as they get into middle school they are expected to compare a LOT more and not focus on one specific topic . They are expected to follow through on a thread, a claim, a theme, an idea and how it is shown in various sources. And this is super new for them, analyzing various sources on the same concept. They really need a structure for this.

So, the typical essay, before they get to me, goes like this, and it is a good precursor:

Introduction that states your thesis and 3 major reasons to support your claim.

Conclusion that looks a whole lot like the introduction.

This format does not allow analysis of multiple sources and if you throw in other sources, it gets messy. Instead, I gear my students to focus on each source separately, then comparing them all.

The Format that Works (Research and Literary Analysis)

First of all, it's important to know what essays I actually do with my kiddos. I do a research unit. This changes almost every year, but typically they choose some kind of topic, I group them based on their topic choice. First, they do research (non-fiction skills) using a book, article, and video. They then use those sources to write an essay on a claim they make based on their topic. Later, they make eBooks in groups based on their topic.

The other essay I do is Literary Analysis . This follows a dystopian unit . They read a dystopian book in book clubs. Then, I have them choose from a short list of short stories that are dystopian. Lastly, we watch the movie The Truman Show . (This year I had them watch "The Scarecrow" on YouTube since we were hybrid due to the pandemic). They then determine a theme that is true for all three sources and write an essay based on that theme.

This essay format works for both of these essays. So here it goes!

informational essay rubric 6th grade

Introductory and Conclusion Statements

In a traditional essay, students have to write a hook, their claim/thesis, and essentially ANOTHER three sentences that state what their essays will be about. In my opinion, all of this is completely unnecessary. How many times do you read introductions in books? Okay, real avid readers do, but in reality many people don't. So for these, I tell my students to get right to the point .

Here's what should be in their introductory and conclusion statements:

A statement that introduces the topic. (This is a hook of some kind. I sometimes tell them to start it with "in our world..." or "in our lives..." and something that relates to their topic. Or just starting it with their topic and explaining what it is.)

The claim/thesis.

A statement that references there are differences and similarities in the sources. (For example: "[Title of sources] support this claim in different and similar ways." That's it.)

This all ends up being 2-3 sentences.

Topic Sentences

I have my students start their essay prep with topic sentences. This helps them get a sense of where their essays will go.

The big thing to understand here is how the paragraphs are set up .

Body #1 : Focus on source #1 and how it shows claim/thesis.

Body #2 : Focus on source #2 and how it shows claim/thesis.

Body #3 : Focus on source #3 and how it shows claim/thesis.

Body #4 : Focus on how ALL SOURCES show the claim/thesis in the same way.

So they start with creating topic sentences for those paragraphs. Each topic sentence is set up like this. The last topic sentence would start with "all sources..." instead of "source title".:

informational essay rubric 6th grade

Body Paragraph Format

In the picture you see below, I have specific colors for specific aspects of body paragraphs. ALL body paragraphs follow this format in that exact sequence/order. I will be completely honest, I don't give them a ton of wiggle room since this is pretty new to them. However, my stronger writers dabble in mixing evidence stems and elaboration stems around.

informational essay rubric 6th grade

Their paragraph starts with the topic sentence they already prepared. From there, the next sentence begins with an evidence stem . Here are a few examples of evidence stems:

According to the text,

The author states,

In [title],

Right after the evidence stem, in the same sentence, they add their text detail to support their topic sentence. I encourage them to quote exactly from the text for most text details. They can paraphrase, too, but should really try to get exact lines.

In regards to quoting, I also mention to them not to quote plop . I made this up. I plan on making a product for this at some point. A quote plop is bad . It's when students take a line from the text and just plop it in their essay. I show them how to break up the quote from the text with their own words.

So, a first sentence may look like this: According to the text [evidence stem, highlighted green] , when Luke was hiding due to being a third child, "they took the woods away" , [text detail with context, a.k.a. not just plopping the quote in the sentence, highlighted yellow].

Directly after that sentence should be an elaboration stem with an elaboration explaining how the text detail shows their claim/thesis. Students highlight this entire sentence in blue and their claim within it dark blue. Here are some elaboration stems:

This proves [claim] because...

This shows [claim] because ...

After that they do the same process two more times; two more text details with elaborations. Lastly they do a closing sentence .

informational essay rubric 6th grade

Comparison Paragraph: This is set up almost exactly the same, except the focus is on how ALL the sources show the claim in the same way. They then provide a NEW text detail from each source to prove how the claim is being shown similarly in each.

informational essay rubric 6th grade

Once all their body paragraphs are written, I have them go review their introductory and conclusion statements, put everything into a final draft and leave the highlights in the essay . This helps them visualize all the components and helps me grade!

For revision, the focus is on not quote plopping, being sure their details support their thesis, changing up the wording of claims/theses, and rearranging for strong writers.

Bottom Line

While this is very limiting for some, it is super helpful for struggling writers. Having that checklist and having the highlights helps students visualize what they need to compare sources in an essay format.

I'd say it'd be great to introduce this in 6th and by 8th, they can certainly make these more interpretive, creative, and unique.

You can find a lot more detail about this in the product below . What you see here is only a taste. This contains a full sample essay, checklists, tips, and more. You can also edit it to meet your needs.

informational essay rubric 6th grade

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Really interesting - thank you!!

This exactly the kind of thing I've been looking for, and even better! I love your approach and it's so well explained. I couldn't disagree more with any of the negative feedback to this article. I think it's perfect for my style of teaching and my standard of writing. Most of all, the way you explained this and broke it down into small steps will make it so achievable for even lagging students to develop great writing skills and feel confident in the process! You nailed it. Thank you so much!

I read all the essay writing format instructions. All the points are useful for any kind of essay writing. But at the age of high-level essay writing learners need to be essay writer experts like the 6 Dollars Essay Website , ready to do professional essay writing for any essay grade.

This is beyond me and I teach HS English. Where does this lady teach, at Princeton? I do not know any 6th grader that does this or would understand this. I see why so many of our young people have become disinterested in the learning process. I also see why so many teachers quit. The profession is stale, boring, and antiquated. This article was not fun to read and I'm thinking this new 5 paragraph writing style would be a drag for the average ela teacher to teach.

. In the blog post, I mention the various types of writing I do with students. I also have other blog posts that discuss these other formats. This is not the end all be all. In my over a decade experience with teaching writing, having a structure helps struggling writers. This is not a writing style. This a format for one type of writing. As teachers, we should be offering all types of formats, especially with younger writers who are still learning how to write.

IMAGES

  1. 6th Grade Informative Essay Rubric

    informational essay rubric 6th grade

  2. Informative Essay Rubric

    informational essay rubric 6th grade

  3. 6Th Grade Presentation Rubric

    informational essay rubric 6th grade

  4. 6th grade Informative/Explanatory Writing Rubric

    informational essay rubric 6th grade

  5. 6th Grade Informative Essay Rubric

    informational essay rubric 6th grade

  6. Writing Rubrics Grade 6 by Becky's Room

    informational essay rubric 6th grade

VIDEO

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COMMENTS

  1. Informational Writing Rubric for 6th grade

    This rubric for sixth-grade informational writing covers all of the major standards in the informational writing strand, including introduction, topic development, transitions, style, conclusion, and more. For helpful prompts and inspiration, use this informational writing rubric in conjunction with the Informational Essay Writing Prompt Choice ...

  2. PDF Texas STAAR Informational Writing Rubric Grades 6-EII

    For pairs in grades 6 through EII, evidence is drawn from both texts. The response reflects a thorough understanding of the writing purpose. Expression of ideas is clear and effective. The writer's word choice is specific, purposeful, and enhances the response. Almost all sentences and phrases are effectively crafted to convey the writer's ...

  3. PDF Rubric for Information Writing Sixth Grade

    Grade 4 (1 POINT) 1.5 PTS Grade 5 (2 POINTS) 2.5 PTS Grade 6 (3 POINTS) 3.5 PTS Grade 7 (4 POINTS) SCORE STRUCTURE (cont.) Ending The writer wrote an ending in which she reminded readers of her subject and may either have suggested a follow-up action or left readers with a final insight. She added her thoughts, feelings, and questions

  4. 6th grade informative writing rubric

    6th grade argumentative writing rubric. Offer 6th grade students a standards-aligned structure for assignments focused on the defense of a position on a topic. Rubric suitable for formative and summative assignments with tasks involving the explanation of a topic. Consider using the 6th-8th Grade Informative QuickMark set with this rubric.

  5. PDF 6th Grade Informative Explanatory

    29 - 36 = Meets Grade Level Expectations ( ) = partially meets requirements of the standard. 22 - 28 = Approaching Grade Level Expectations Overall Score:

  6. PDF Writing Rubric

    Informative-Explanatory Essay Writing Rubric (Grades 6 -11) Score 4 3 2 1 Purpose, Focus, and Organization The response is fully sustained and consistently focused within the purpose, audience, and task; and it has a clear controlling idea and effective organizational structure creating coherence and completeness. The

  7. PDF Grade 6: Informative/Explanatory Writing Rubric DRAFT

    Note: Descriptors in bold are taken directly from the CCSS for this grade level. Some of the language used in this rubric has been adapted from the SBAC and PAARC rubrics. 4 - Exceeds 3 - Proficient 2 - Approaching 1 - Beginning Understanding Demonstrates a deep understanding of content Shows a solid understanding of content Demonstrates a limited

  8. Sixth Grade Informational Writing Rubric

    Sixth Grade Informational Writing Rubric. 6th gr.Informative.Rubric.doc, 53.50 KB; (Last Modified on October 15, 2015) Holland Central School District 103 Canada Street . Holland, NY 14080 . Phone: (716) 537-8200. Fax: Email Us Site Map. Web Accessibility;

  9. PDF FINAL English Language Arts Text-based Writing Rubrics Grades 6 11

    FINAL ELA Text-based Writing Rubrics, Grades 6-11: Informative/Explanatory Florida Standards Assessments 2 UPDATED OCTOBER 2014 Score Purpose, Focus, and Organization

  10. Essay Rubric

    Grading rubrics can be of great benefit to both you and your students. For you, a rubric saves time and decreases subjectivity. Specific criteria are explicitly stated, facilitating the grading process and increasing your objectivity. For students, the use of grading rubrics helps them to meet or exceed expectations, to view the grading process ...

  11. PDF The AASA Writing Rubric Grades 6-8 Informative

    6-8 Informative Rubric. This document is for the Grades 6-8 Informative rubric. This information can easily be applied to the Grades 6-8 Informative rubric. They are very similar. In addition, since the rubrics are banded by grade level, it is important to point out that the expectations for each grade level are still different.

  12. PDF MCAP English Language Arts and Literacy

    Written Expression. Demonstrates a full and complete understanding of ideas in the texts by providing an accurate analysis supported with effective and convincing textual evidence. Examines and conveys complex ideas, concepts, and information clearly and accurately through the effective selection, organization, and analysis of content.

  13. PDF Grades 4-6 B.E.S.T. Writing Expository Rubric

    Grades 4-6 Expository Rubric Responses are scored holistically by domain and earn scores by demonstrating most of the descriptors in a given score point.*. Central idea is focused on the task • Skillful development demonstrates • Integration of academic vocabulary and consistently maintained thorough understanding of the topic. strengthens ...

  14. PDF Writing Assessment and Evaluation Rubrics

    Holistic scoring is a quick method of evaluating a composition based on the reader's general impres-sion of the overall quality of the writing—you can generally read a student's composition and assign a score to it in two or three minutes. Holistic scoring is usually based on a scale of 0-4, 0-5, or 0-6.

  15. Free 6th grade writing rubrics

    This free rubric has two versions! Both of them include 5 levels of writing: beginning, high beginning, intermediate, high intermediate and advanced. The second version of the rubric includes scores on the page in each level from 1-3. This correlates with how well they have scored in the given level.

  16. PDF Expository Rubrics

    The following rubrics provide a scale of 1-4 (with 4 being the highest) for scoring each of the six specific skills for Expository writing. These rubrics can be used successfully to assess any piece of expository writing. Use each skill rubric individually or combine each skill rubric for a total score - maximum score of 24; minimum score of 6.

  17. PDF New York State Grade 6-8 Expository Writing Evaluation Rubric

    New York State Grade 6-8 Expository Writing Evaluation Rubric. If the prompt requires two texts and the student only references one text, the response can be scored no higher than a 2. If the student writes only a personal response and makes no reference to the text(s), the response can be scored no higher than a 1.

  18. PDF Rubric for Information Writing—Sixth Grade

    ma be reproduced for classroom use. 4 b Luc Calins and Colleagues from the TCRWp from nits of Study in Argument, Information, and Narrative Writing, rades 6-8 (rsthand portsmouth n). Rubric for Information Writing—Sixth Grade Grade 4 (1 POINT) 1.5 PTS Grade 5 (2 POINTS) 2.5 PTS Grade 6 (3 POINTS) 3.5 PTS Grade 7 (4 POINTS) SCORE STRUCTURE

  19. Ohio's State Tests Holistic Informative/Explanatory Writing Rubric

    • a thesis statement that is evident throughout, • some loosely related material, • an adequate organizational structure that includes an introduction and conclusion, and

  20. Free informational text rubrics

    Created by. Truscott Teaches. This FREEBIE contains a Main Idea Assignment that instruct students to analyze an informational text to determine the main idea and identify supporting details. The text is written for middle school grades (6th grade, 7th grade, 8th grade) and contains an answer key and a Central Idea standards based grading rubric.

  21. Essays in 6th Grade: A Basic Format that Elevates the Standard 5

    They really need a structure for this. So, the typical essay, before they get to me, goes like this, and it is a good precursor: Introduction that states your thesis and 3 major reasons to support your claim. Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Conclusion that looks a whole lot like the introduction.

  22. PDF 5th Grade Informative/Explanatory Writing Rubric

    5 - 6 = < 5 = e L.5.1 L.5.2 W.5.2d (L.5.5) (L.5.6) (Sentence Fluency) The writing: incorporates some sentences that are rhythmic and flowing, using a variety of correctly structured sentence types; flows well when read aloud. (Conventions) The writing: demonstrates strong control of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling;