A Rubric to Assess and Improve Technical Writing in Undergraduate Engineering Courses
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Written Skills in Engineering Education
1.2. Use of Rubrics
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedure and Corpus of Study
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- Individual final exam, 60% of the final grade: It was an online exam done at the end of the course.
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- 11 (to 14) exercises, 10% of the final grade: They were completed by the groups along the first 10 weeks of the course. All the exercises will be treated as a single writing assignment throughout this paper. We will not refer to the individual exercises separately.
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- An essay worth 30% of the final grade submitted via Moodle by the end of the course: The students worked on this essay for 5 weeks at the end of the semester. Chronologically speaking, therefore, the submission of the essay took place after the students had received feedback on each of their exercises. The groups were required to complement this task with a 10- to 15-min oral presentation of the contents of the essay. This presentation was done on the platform Blackboard Collaborate.
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- Title of the essay and name of the students in the group.
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- Table of contents.
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- Introduction.
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- Description of the element, operation, classification, applications. Attachment of videos of the item working is possible.
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- Calculations: propose 2 or 3 solved and explained examples of calculation and design. In the case of the simplest elements (such as bearings, screws, belts, springs), a greater number of exercises should be presented. The explanations should be phrased in a way, and contain the detail required, to be intelligible for self-study.
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- Conclusions.
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- Bibliography.
2.3. The Rubric
2.3.1. Mathematical Area
2.3.2. Linguistic Area
2.3.3. Rhetorical-Organizational Area
2.3.4. On the Application of the Rubric
3. Results and Discussions
3.1. Mathematical and Technical Area
3.2. Linguistic Area
3.3. Rhetorical-Organizational Area
4. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Area | Category | |
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I Mathematical | 1 | Mathematical coherence: managing formulas and units. |
2 | Technical description of operation and applications. | |
3 | Decision making. | |
II Linguistic | 4 | Sentence structure (syntax). Use of complex sentences (coordinated or subordinate) or simple ones. Use of discursive connectors. |
5 | Word selection (Lexicon), empty words. Scientific correction | |
6 | Grammar, spelling and punctuation. | |
III Rhetorical-organizational | 7 | Clarity of reading: page layout, graphs. |
8 | Rhetorical organization of the text (logical organization). Interpretation of results. |
Mathematical Area | Expert 4 | Advanced 3 | Apprentice 2 | Novel 1 |
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1-Mathematical coherence: managing formulas and units |
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2-Technical description of operation and applications |
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3-Decision-making |
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Linguistic Area | Expert 4 | Advanced 3 | Apprentice 2 | Novel 1 |
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4-Sentence structure (syntax). Use of complex sentences (coordinated or subordinate) or simple ones. Use of discursive connectors. |
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5-Word selection (Lexicon), empty words. Scientific correction |
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6-Grammar, spelling, and punctuation |
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Rhetorical-Organizational Area | Expert 4 | Advanced 3 | Apprentice 2 | Novel 1 |
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7-Clarity of reading: page layout, graphs |
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8-Rhetorical organization of the text (logical organization): Interpretation of results |
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Expert 4 | Advanced 3 | Apprentice 2 | Novel 1 | |
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8.1-Data collection. Identification of the type of exercise |
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8.2-Make sure what the exercise is asking for/results |
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8.3-Expression of the correct formulation and definition of the parameters present |
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8.4-Explanation of the development and steps to follow |
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8.5-Underline the results attained |
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Expert 4 | Advanced 3 | Apprentice 2 | Novel 1 | |
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8.6-Introduction: motivation, aims, scope, applications, limitations |
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8.7. Identification of the type of analysis: mechanical, static, dynamic, energetic. Description of hypothesis used, environment, technical unit system. |
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8.8. Description of components, assembly. Description of material used, layers, special components. |
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8.9. Practical case: description of the problem to be studied. |
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8.10. Expression of the correct formulation and definition of the parameters present. |
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8.11. Explanation of the development and steps to follow. |
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8.12. Underline the results attained. |
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8.13. Conclusions. |
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8.14. Bibliography. |
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Cantera, M.A.; Arevalo, M.-J.; García-Marina, V.; Alves-Castro, M. A Rubric to Assess and Improve Technical Writing in Undergraduate Engineering Courses. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 146. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11040146
Cantera MA, Arevalo M-J, García-Marina V, Alves-Castro M. A Rubric to Assess and Improve Technical Writing in Undergraduate Engineering Courses. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(4):146. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11040146
Chicago/Turabian StyleCantera, Maria Asun, María-José Arevalo, Vanessa García-Marina, and Marian Alves-Castro. 2021. "A Rubric to Assess and Improve Technical Writing in Undergraduate Engineering Courses" Education Sciences 11, no. 4: 146. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11040146
APA StyleCantera, M. A., Arevalo, M. -J., García-Marina, V., & Alves-Castro, M. (2021). A Rubric to Assess and Improve Technical Writing in Undergraduate Engineering Courses. Education Sciences, 11(4), 146. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11040146