Discuss on the works of art you select must fit within the time period of our course study in Western Art Chapters 13 on in Janson’s Vol. 2.Paper Rubric: How it is graded.
Your overall paper is divided into three different rubrics that are then combined on
a point scale that parallels a numerical grade; this sounds fancy, but it isn’t. The
three divisions are G B and A.
G stands for grammar and usage. This also involves footnotes, syntax, meaning,
mechanics et al.
B stands for bibliography and research. This is usually where the problems occur
in the paper. Not doing the research really affects your grade. Your trip to the
museum and your trip to the Bankier are here noted and graded. If you’ve done
neither that can get you a zero in this section which can put your entire paper in
jeopardy, as well it might.
A stands for argument and topic. This section decides how well (or how poorly)
you’ve both decided upon and explained your topic.
In each section you can get a maximum of four points (4), making a 100 percent,
A+ paper one that equals twelve points(12). Four points means you’ve done a
stellar job for that section. A three (3) denotes a good show overall with some
gaps; a two (2) means I’ve had to go to the Well of Mercy one too many times to
overlook errors; one (1) denotes a poor or perfunctory effort; a zero (0) means you
didn’t do the section at all or if you did, you did it terribly. So here is how it breaks
down-
12= 100= A+
11=94= A
10= 90= A
9= 88=B+
8 = 83=B
7 =78= C+
6 = 75 = C
5= 72 = C
4= 68 = D
3 = 63 = F
2= 58= F
1 = 55 =F