5 Outstanding | 4 Good | 3 Marginal | 1 Unsatisfactory | |
Logic | Logic is valid. Assumptions explicit. Contradictions clearly stated and shown. Compututation is appropriate, complete. Conclusion drawn. Result is general. | Logic is valid. Assumptions not explicit, or contradiction unclear. Computation is appropriate but not complete. Conclusion vague. | Main argument valid; logic may be flawed. Computation is appropriate, but not necessarily correct. Question is partially answered. | Main argument invalid. Computation may be inappropriate, or question is not addressed. |
Organization | Question is explicit. Ideas are linearly connected. No hand waving required. All variables named. Conclusion is clear and explicit. | Question is explicit. Ideas are linearly connected. Little hand waving required. Variables named. Conclusion is clear but may be implicit. | Question is clear. Ideas connected, but hand waving required. Variables may not be names. Conclusion missing or unclear. | Question not stated. Ideas not explicitly connected--loosely or randomly strung together, or there is no identifiable structure. Variables not named. Conclusion missing or unclear. |
Problem Selection (If applicable) | Challenging; requires significant intellectual resources; potential for a new or different understanding. | Requires above average intellectual work; complex computation, or modest computation with interpretation. | Requires modest intellectual work; modest computation with minimal interpretation. | Requires little or no intellectual work: e.g. Fill in the blank computation. |
Documentation (If applicable) | Sources, whether quoted, paraphrased, or summarized, are correctly cited. | Minor errors in the in-text citations or bibliography; a reader can easily tell where sources are used. | Occasional flawed or missing citation obscures the source being used. | Sources are not cited or documented, and often stray from the proper form. |
GOOD:
Prove: There are exactly three lines in the three point geometry.
Proof: There are exactly three points ...
BAD:
There are exactly three lines in the three point geometry. There are exactly three points...
GOOD: Given a line m and a point A not on m, there is exactly one line through A that does not meet m.
BAD: Given a line and a point not on the line, there is exacly one line through the point that does not meet it.
Example: A picture of arbitrary lines in a finite geometry should not include a point of intersection unless two lines always intersect, and then only after you have proved that fact.
GOOD:
Axiom 2: Two lines are on at least on point.
Axiom 3: Two points are on at most one line.
Two arbitrary lines m and n are on at least one point, A, by Axiom 2. Suppose m and n are also on point B. Then A and B are on two lines m and n, contradicting Axiom 3.
BAD: Two lines m and n are on at least one point by Axiom 2. If m and n lie on another point then there is a contradiction.
E.g. Subtracting equation (1) from (3) gives ...