The WebQuest format can be applied to a variety of teaching situations. If you take advantage of all the possibilities inherent in the format, your students will have a rich and powerful experience. This rubric will help you pinpoint the ways in which your WebQuest isn't doing everything it could do. If a page seems to fall between categories, feel free to score it with in-between points.
Overall
Aesthetics (This
refers to the WebQuest page itself, not the external resources linked
to it.) Overall
Visual Appeal 0
points There are few or no graphic
elements. No variation in layout or typography. OR Color is garish and/or typographic
variations are overused and legibility suffers. Background interferes
with the readability. 2
points Graphic elements sometimes,
but not always, contribute to the understanding of concepts, ideas and
relationships. There is some variation in type size, color, and layout. 4
points Appropriate and thematic
graphic elements are used to make visual connections that contribute
to the understanding of concepts, ideas and relationships. Differences
in type size and/or color are used well and consistently. 0
points Getting
through the lesson is confusing and unconventional. Pages can't be found
easily and/or the way back isn't clear. 2
points There are
a few places where the learner can get lost and not know where to go
next. 4
points Navigation
is seamless. It is always clear to the learner what all the pieces are
and how to get to them. 0
points There are
more than 5 broken links, misplaced or missing images, badly sized tables,
misspellings and/or grammatical errors. 1
point There are
some broken links, misplaced or missing images, badly sized tables,
misspellings and/or grammatical errors. 2
points No mechanical
problems noted. Introduction Motivational
Effectiveness of Introduction 0
points The introduction is purely
factual, with no appeal to relevance or social importance OR The scenario posed is transparently
bogus and doesn't respect the media literacy of today's learners. 1
point The introduction relates
somewhat to the learner's interests and/or describes a compelling question
or problem. 2
points The introduction draws the
reader into the lesson by relating to the learner's interests or goals
and/or engagingly describing a compelling question or problem. Cognitive
Effectiveness of the Introduction 0
points The introduction doesn't
prepare the reader for what is to come, or build on what the learner
already knows. 1
point The introduction makes some
reference to learner's prior knowledge and previews to some extent what
the lesson is about. 2
points The introduction builds
on learner's prior knowledge and effectively prepares the learner by
foreshadowing what the lesson is about. Task
(The task is the
end result of student efforts... not the steps involved in getting there.) Connection
of Task to Standards (ISTE,MCF
Content, MCF Technology, NAD) 0
points The task is not related
to standards. 2
point The task is referenced to
standards but is not clearly connected to what students must know and
be able to do to achieve proficiency of those standards. 4
points The task is referenced to
standards and is clearly connected to what students must know and be
able to do to achieve proficiency of those standards. Cognitive
Level of the Task 0
points Task requires simply comprehending
or retelling of information found on web pages and answering factual
questions. 3
points Task is doable but is limited
in its significance to students' lives. The task requires analysis of
information and/or putting together information from several sources. 6
points Task is doable and engaging,
and elicits thinking that goes beyond rote comprehension. The task requires
synthesis of multiple sources of information, and/or taking a position,
and/or going beyond the data given and making a generalization or creative
product. See WebQuest Taskonomy. Process
(The process is
the step-by-step description of how students will accomplish the task.) Clarity
of Process 0
points Process is not clearly stated.
Students would not know exactly what they were supposed to do just from
reading this. 2
points Some directions are given,
but there is missing information. Students might be confused. 4
points Every step is clearly stated.
Most students would know exactly where they are at each step of the
process and know what to do next. Scaffolding
of Process 0
points The process lacks strategies
and organizational tools needed for students to gain the knowledge needed
to complete the task. Activities are of little
significance to one another and/or to the accomplishment of the task. 3
points Strategies and organizational
tools embedded in the process are insufficient to ensure that all students
will gain the knowledge needed to complete the task. Some of the activities do
not relate specifically to the accomplishment of the task. 6
points The process provides students
coming in at different entry levels with strategies and organizational
tools to access and gain the knowledge needed to complete the task. Activities are clearly related
and designed to take the students from basic knowledge to higher level
thinking. Checks for understanding
are built in to assess whether students are getting it. See: Richness
of Process 0
points Few steps, no separate roles
assigned. 1
points Some separate tasks or roles
assigned. More complex activities required. 2
points Different roles are assigned
to help students understand different perspectives and/or share responsibility
in accomplishing the task. Resources
(Note: you should
evaluate all resources linked to the page, even if they are in sections
other than the Process block. Also note that books, video and other
off-line resources can and should be used where appropriate.) Relevance
& Quantity of Resources 0
points Resources provided are not
sufficient for students to accomplish the task. OR There are too many resources
for learners to look at in a reasonable time. 2
point There is some connection
between the resources and the information needed for students to accomplish
the task. Some resources don't add anything new. 4
points There is a clear and meaningful
connection between all the resources and the information needed for
students to accomplish the task. Every resource carries its weight. Quality
of 0
points Links are mundane. They
lead to information that could be found in a classroom encyclopedia. 2
points Some links carry information
not ordinarily found in a classroom. 4
points Links make excellent use
of the Web's timeliness and colorfulness. Varied resources provide
enough meaningful information for students to think deeply. Evaluation Clarity
of Evaluation Criteria 0
points Criteria for success are
not described. 3
points Criteria for success are
at least partially described. 6
points Criteria for success are
clearly stated in the form of a rubric. Criteria include qualitative
as well as quantitative descriptors. The evaluation instrument
clearly measures what students must know and be able to do to accomplish
the task. See Creating a Rubric. Teacher
Notes (This is
supporting documentation for instructors interested in using the WebQuest.)
Purpose, Standards, and Benchmarks 0 points Purpose is not clearly stated.
Other instructors would not know the purpose or the WebQuest or how
what standards it is supposed to meet just from reading this. 2 points Some explanations are given,
but there is missing information. Instructors might be confused. 4 points The purpose of the WebQuest
is clearly stated. Content and technology standards are presented with
relevant benchmarks identified. Most instructors would know exactly
what type(s) of learning this WebQuest was designed to facilitate. Learning
Theory & Research-based Instructional Strategies 0 points Teacher notes do not indicate
the theoretical foundation of the WebQuest. Instructional strategies
used in the WebQuest are not research-based. 1 points Teacher notes explain how
the WebQuest fits within the Dimensions of Learning framework and what
types of thinking processes the students will use. Some of the instructional
strategies used in the WebQuest are not research-based. or are not properly
implemented. (For example, planning group work but labeling it cooperative
learning.) 2 points Teacher notes explain how
the WebQuest fits within the Dimensions of Learning framework, what
types of thinking processes the students will use, and briefly describes
the learning theory/theories upon which support the design of the WebQuest. The instructional strategies
used in the WebQuest are research-based and are properly implemented. Management
Plans 0 points Teacher notes do not include
management plans. 2 points Teacher notes includes plans
for managing the technology, the learning activities, OR student learning. 4 points Teacher notes includes plans
for managing the technology, the learning activities, and student learning. Total
Score /60
Resources
Original WebQuest
rubric by Bernie Dodge.
This version was modified by Larry Burton of Andrews University July 22, 2004
from
Version
1.03. Modified by Laura Bellofatto, Nick Bohl, Mike Casey, Marsha Krill, and
Bernie Dodge.