Edcite’s Rubric Report helps teachers quickly interpret rubric-based scores across skills so they can plan targeted re-teaches, identify misconceptions, and give students clear, actionable feedback. Below are practical ways to use the report to guide instruction.
To familiarize yourself with how to run the Rubric Report, check out this help guide. If you’d like support with the entire rubric process – from creation to grading to reports – check out this YouTube tutorial!
Analyzing student performance after you’ve graded on a rubric can feel overwhelming. Each rubric has multiple, specific skills, and student scores often land across the entire spectrum. With Edcite’s Rubric Report, you can get concise visuals that break down average score by column and group students by their score for each column. With this data, you can:
Use the Rubric Report to Decide Whole-Group vs Small-Group Re-teaching

Use the Average Score by Column portion of the report to decide which skills would be best re-taught to the entire group, and which can be a focus for smaller groups.
In the image below, students did well overall with drawing a line from the tree to water, but about 50% of students struggled with the two skills on the far right.
Because so many students struggled with them, I can focus my whole-group re-teach on the two skills listed on the right of the graph. And where fewer students struggled, I can pull a small group of the student(s) for a targeted re-teach.
Pro Tip: Sort columns by Score, and you will always see the highest scoring columns to the left and the lower scoring columns to the right.
Identify Misconceptions Through Column-by-Column Rubric Analysis

Use the Column by Column Breakdown of Scores to see how many students scored within each point value for a column. This allows you to decide how “severe” the gaps are.
Are the majority of students scoring in the middle ranges of the rubric for this skill? Or do you have a handful of high-performing students and then some scoring closer to the 0-1 side of the scale?
Use the answers to these questions to decide what specific skill you’ll target in your re-teaches.
Empower Students to Use Rubric Scores to Guide Learning

When you’ve graded on a rubric, you can use the report settings to allow students to see the grade and your feedback, OR you can print out the bottom portion of the grade report to give students their score for each portion of the rubric.
With this information, students can re-read the rubric and set specific goals for what they want to improve on. Tighten the feedback loop by having students practice that skill immediately: they can re-do the portion of the project, essay, short answer, etc. that they’d like to improve on.
After that, you can either give students feedback or pair them with someone you saw on the report who did well in the skill they are lacking for some peer feedback.
FAQ: Edcite’s Rubric Report
What is Edcite’s Rubric Report used for?
It summarizes rubric-based grading data so teachers can identify strengths, gaps, and misconceptions across specific rubric skills.
How can it help with re-teaching?
The Average Score by Column view shows which skills need whole-group support and which are better suited for small-group intervention.
Can students use the rubric data?
Yes. Teachers can share rubric results so students can set goals, revise work, and act on targeted feedback.
Where do I learn how to run the report?
Use Edcite’s help guide or the linked YouTube tutorial for a step-by-step walkthrough.


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