Grading
Scheme for Undergraduate work in the UK
Five attributes of students written
work are taken into account when assigning marks:
1: Answer: To what extent does the
work address the topic or answer the question concerned?
2: Structure: Is the general
structure of the work coherent?
3: Flow: Does each statement
follow on sensibly from it's predecessor?
4: Argument: is there a convincing
line of academic argument running through the work?
5: Evidence: are claims which are made supported by relevant
evidence from the literature?
When mapped onto the criteria used for
assigning marks in a department, this is what work in each category
is likely to exhibit.
First Class (1:1)
Work awarded a first class mark is
likely to:
Address topic or answer question
in an explicit manner;'
Announce its structure at start,
and stick closely to this announced structure throughout;
Have relationships between
statements which are very easy to recognise;
Have a very strong line of
academic argument'
Give wide ranging and appropriate evidential support for
claims which are made.
Within this category of very good work,
the mark awarded will be above 70%. The mark awarded will depend on
how successfully the work is judged to meet the above mentioned
criteria. A better quality first simply has more of these qualities,
especially those concerned with structure, argument and evidence.
Therefore, a top first has to be very well written, develop a strong
line of academic argument which is adhered to closely throughout, and
draw on a wide range of academic material.
Upper Second Class (2:1)
Work awarded an upper second class mark
is likely to:
Attempt to address topic or to
answer question;
Have a detectable structure which
is adhered to for the most part;
Have relationships between
statements which are generally easy to recognise;
Have a convincing line of
argument'
Support claims which are made by reference to relevant
material from the literature.
Within this category of good work, the
mark awarded will be in the range 60-70%. The mark awarded will
depend on how successfully the work is judged to meet the above
mentioned criteria. At minimum, an upper second class piece of work
must attempt to address the topic or answer the question concerned,
be clearly written and show signs that the student has read beyond
the basic source material. For assessments that are lecture based,
this usually means going beyond the material which was presented in
the lectures themselves; for assignments that are not lecture based,
this means going beyond secondary sources such as textbooks.
Additionally, a top upper second is likely to have a clearer
structure, a stronger line of argument and draw on a broader range of
material.
Lower Second Class (2:2)
Work awarded a lower second class mark
is likely to:
Present relevant material, but
fail to use it to answer the question or address the issue
concerned;
Have a structure, but one which is
rather loose and unannounced;
Have relationships between
statements which are sometimes hard to follow;
Have an unconvincing line of
argument (information drives argument, rather than the other way
round);
Tend to make claims without supporting evidence.
Within this category of satisfactory
work, the mark awarded will be in the range 50-60%. The mark awarded
will depend on how successfully the work is judged to meet the above
mentioned criteria. At minimum, a lower second class of work must
show that the student has a fair knowledge of the basic source
material which to the question is related. Typically, this means
demonstrating that the relevant lecture course has been attended
and/or that relevant secondary sources have been read. Higher marks
in this category are awarded as a function of the relevance and
quantity of the material which is presented, the accuracy with which
this material is handled and the overall clarify with which the
assignment is written. Thus a top lower second is likely to
reproduce, with reasonable accuracy, material which is relevant to
the assignment topic or question concerned, and to structure this
material so that the assignment has a beginning, middle and end; it
is distinguished from an upper second mainly by not having gone much
beyond what was presented in the lectures themselves or is available
in secondary sources.
Third Class (3:1)
Work awarded a third class mark is
likely to:
Fail to address the topic or
answer question, either by reproducing accurately material which is
only partly relevant or by reproducing inaccurately material which
is relevant;
Lack a clear structure or
framework;
Have relationships between
statements which are frequently hard to recognise;
Lack a clear line of argument ;
Make poor use of evidence to support claims which are made.
Within this category of relatively poor
work, the mark awarded will be in the range 40-50%. The mark awarded
will depend on how successfully the work is judged to meet the above
mentioned criteria. At minimum, a third class of work must contain
some relevant material. Typically, this means providing some
indication that the relevant lecture course has been attended and/or
that relevant secondary sources have been read. However, the
reproduction of this material is either scanty or inaccurate. A top
third is likely to reproduce this material with fewer inaccuracies,
but still lacks structure and argument.
Fail
Work given a fail mark is likely to:
Fail to address the topic or to
answer question;
Lack a structure or framework;
Fail repeatedly to relate
statements to each other;
Lack an apparent line of argument;
Fail to use evidence to support claims which are made.
Within this category of poor work, the
mark awarded will be below 40%. The mark awarded will depend on how
badly the work fails to meet the above mentioned criteria.
30% might be awarded to an answer which
contains some indication that the student can recall having once read
or hard something relevant to the assignment topic or question
concerned. 20% might be awarded to an answer which contains something
which shows that the relevant lecture course ha been attended, even
if there is little in the answer itself which is of direct relevance
to the question. A 0% answer contains no indication that the student
knows anything from the psychological literature which is even
remotely relevant to the question.