Science Rubric Builder
Build a science rubric for lab reports, experimental design, CER writing, or scientific models, assessing science practices and content understanding alongside procedural accuracy.
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- Structured PDF with guiding questions per section
- Print-friendly layout, works on screen or paper
- Includes Flip's pedagogical notes and tips
When to use this template
- Assessing lab reports and experimental investigations
- CER writing across all science topics and grade levels
- Scientific model assessment (diagrams, simulations, physical models)
- Experimental design tasks where students plan their own investigations
- Any science assessment where you want to assess reasoning, not just procedure and data
Template sections
Science rubrics work when they assess thinking and reasoning alongside procedure and data collection. A student who collects careful data and analyzes it poorly demonstrates less scientific understanding than one who makes a collection error but reasons soundly about what the data shows. This builder helps you design rubrics that capture the full picture of scientific thinking.
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For Science
Science Rubric pairs well with lab work: the structured phases keep inquiry focused while leaving room for student-driven investigation.
About the Science Rubric framework
Science assessment should reflect the three-dimensional nature of science learning: disciplinary core ideas (content), science and engineering practices (what scientists do), and crosscutting concepts (patterns of thinking that span disciplines). A science rubric that only assesses whether students followed lab procedures and recorded correct data misses most of what science learning actually involves.
Lab report rubrics: The most common science rubric type. Strong lab report rubrics assess: question or hypothesis quality (does it show scientific thinking?), investigation design (was the procedure appropriate and controlled?), data quality (was data collected accurately and systematically?), analysis (does the student reason from data, not just restate it?), and conclusion (does the CER argument use evidence appropriately?).
CER rubrics: Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) writing is central to science communication. A dedicated CER rubric should assess each component separately: the claim (does it directly answer the question?), the evidence (is it from the investigation, specific, and sufficient?), and the reasoning (does it explain the scientific principle that connects evidence to claim?).
Scientific modeling rubrics: Models (diagrams, simulations, physical models) are a core science practice. Rubrics for scientific models should assess: accuracy (does the model correctly represent the phenomenon?), representation (does it use appropriate conventions?), and utility (can someone else use it to predict or explain the phenomenon?).
Experimental design rubrics: For tasks where students design their own investigations, the rubric should assess: question quality, variable identification, controlled experiment design, data collection plan, and safety considerations.
Science practice integration: Whatever task you are assessing, consider including a criterion for one or two science practices that were central to the lesson: asking questions, developing and using models, analyzing data, constructing explanations, or arguing from evidence. This signals to students that doing science is valued, not just knowing science content.
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