Pick ELA criteria that judge thinking, not page count
During a Grade 7 argument essay launch, the class needs a rubric that values claim quality and reasoning, not who writes the longest paper. Start with rows that mirror how you’ll confer: thesis/claim, evidence selection, integration and citation, analysis versus summary, organization and cohesion, style/voice, and conventions. Keep “ideas” and “conventions” separate so a student with strong reasoning but comma splices can still see where to improve. Weight rows to match your unit’s priority (for example, analysis heavier than mechanics during argument writing).
Avoid rows like “Introduction,” “Body,” “Conclusion” or “Length” that reward structure labels over substance. Replace “Hooks the reader” with “Introduces a precise, arguable claim.” Replace “Uses quotes” with “Selects relevant textual evidence and integrates it with context.” To try this with a live draft, open the rubric generator and ask for a 4-level scale with student-facing descriptors; you can edit weights after you see the first pass in ClassPods.