Honors College CE/T Third Reader Role Overview  Description of Third Reader Role  Day of Defense  Responsibilities to the student defending  Responsibilities to the Honors College  Rubric for.

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Transcript Honors College CE/T Third Reader Role Overview  Description of Third Reader Role  Day of Defense  Responsibilities to the student defending  Responsibilities to the Honors College  Rubric for.

Honors College
CE/T
Third Reader Role
Overview

Description of Third Reader Role

Day of Defense

Responsibilities to the student defending

Responsibilities to the Honors College

Rubric for Grading Defense
Third Reader Role



As third reader you serve as a representative
of the Honors College on the Capstone
Experience/ Thesis Committee.
Your duty is to ensure fairness and facilitate a
defense of the caliber expected of an Honors
College Graduate.
Ensure that the CE/T Final Evaluation Form is
returned to the Honors College immediately
following the defense.
Day of the Defense
 On
the Day of the Defense, you will need
to bring along a final evaluation form
accessible here.
Each student should have the form with them, but it is
always good to have a back up plan in place, just in case
nerves get the better of the student.
Responsibilities
to Student
 Facilitate
the scheduling of the defense
by responding to any email
communication or poll in a timely manner
 Review
the draft the student will submit to
you prior to the defense
 Participate
questions
in the defense by asking
Responsibilities
to the Honors College
 Determining
the honors designation for
the thesis. As third reader you will lead the
discussion with input from the first and
second readers.
(Designations are: Fail/Pass/Pass with
Honors/ Pass with Distinction)
To do this adequately the third reader should attend several
defenses prior to serving in this role. Defense dates/venues are
announced on the Honors College Calendar.
Responsibilities
to the Honors College
 Ensuring
the Final Evaluation Form is
returned to the Honors College either by
self or by primary, or secondary readers.
 Ensuring
the Honors College CE/T
expectations are met, according to
rubric.
Rubric for the CE/T
Scholarly/
Intellectual/
Creative Merit (50%)
POOR/FAIL
PASS
PASS WITH HONORS
Rationale
no clear rationale or a weak
rationale for the project
some rationale presented,
begins to motivate the work
provides and discusses a persuasive and creative rationale
suitable rationale
Complexity in
Framing Topic
frames complex questions as
simple ones
invests question with some
complexity, may over
simplify or over extend
reasonable balance
between focus and
complexity
frames the topic with a full
appreciation of its complexity while
retaining appropriate focus
Approach/
Methodology
not clear what was done or
why, or an inappropriate
method
approach is generally
appropriate and properly
executed
clearly described and
justified, well-chosen
and appropriate, and
well-executed
creative and sophisticated methods
Scholarly Content
author does not demonstrate
awareness of appropriate
scholarship, may over rely on
too few sources
author demonstrates a
reasonable awareness of
appropriate scholarship
author demonstrates
broad awareness and
situates own work within
the appropriate
scholarship
author demonstrates a broad
awareness of appropriate
scholarship, situates own work within
the appropriate scholarship, and
makes contributions to the field, or
identifies a new direction for
investigation
Position
does not take a clear or
defensible position or draw a
clear conclusion
clearly describes, or begins
to support, test, extend, or
critique a position that is
already in previous
scholarship
thoroughly and
effectively supports,
tests, extends, or
critiques a position that
is already in previous
scholarship
develops a clear and defensible
position of his/her own, draws a
significant conclusion
Argument
weak, invalid, or no argument, Some arguments valid and
perhaps a simple assertion
well-supported, some not
main arguments valid,
systematic,
and well supported
arguments both well supported and
genuinely compared to conflicting
explanations
Use of Data/
Evidence
draws on little or no evidence,
mostly relies on assertions or
opinions, or evidence not
clearly presented
treats related ideas or data as
unrelated, or draws weak or
simplistic connections
some appropriate use of
evidence but uneven
feasible evidence
fully exploits the richness of the
appropriately selected
data/evidence/ideas, and is
and not over interpreted sufficiently persuasive
begins to establish
connections and perceive
implications of the material
brings together related
data or ideas in
productive ways,
thoroughly discusses
implications of material
Insight, Seeing
Patterns and
Connections
PASS WITH DISTINCTION
develops insightful connections and
patterns that require intellectual
creativity
Rubric for the CE/T
Writing Style and
Quality (30%)
POOR/FAIL
PASS
PASS WITH HONORS
PASS WITH DISTINCTION
Grammar and
Spelling,
Usage
significantly impairs
readability
numerous errors
some errors
a few minor errors
Organization
author does not
demonstrate awareness of
the scholarly literature,
may over rely on too few
sources
structure is of inconsistent
quality, may have
choppy transitions and/or
redundancies or
disconnections
structure supports the structure enhances the
argument, clearly
argument, strong sections and
ordered sections fit
seamless flow
together well
Clarity, Style,
Readability as
Appropriate to
Genre and
Discipline
gets in the way of reading
for content
style is inconsistent or
uneven
good, easy to follow
and read for content
exceptional, including elegant
style, transparent argument
structure
Follows
Guidelines of
Honors College
(10%)
POOR/FAIL
PASS
PASS WITH HONORS
PASS WITH DISTINCTION
Size of Project
(Treat as a
Continuum—Mark
Your Estimate of
Where This Project
Falls)
equivalent to less than the
work for one three hour
course
equivalent of one and a
half three hour courses
equivalent of two
three hour courses
equivalent of two or more three
hour courses
CE/T Defense
(10%)
POOR/FAIL
PASS
PASS WITH HONORS
PASS WITH DISTINCTION
Oral Presentation
very weak or poor oral
a weak oral presentation, a solid, but not great
presentation (disorganized unclear at times, difficulty oral presentation
and difficult to follow)
answering questions
a superior defense, took the
presentation beyond the written
work; handled questions well,
showed poise and confidence.
Thank you for your
willingness in representing
the Honors College!