Danielson - Domain 3 Rubric
Danielson - Domain 3 Rubric
Danielson - Domain 3 Rubric
(OBSERVABLE COMPONENTS)
The instructional purpose of the lesson is clearly communicated to students, including where it is situated
Level 3 within broader learning; directions and procedures are explained clearly and may be modeled. The
teacher’s explanation of content is scaffolded, clear, and accurate and connects with students’
knowledge and experience. During the explanation of content, the teacher focuses, as appropriate, on
strategies students can use when working independently and invites student intellectual engagement.
The teacher’s spoken and written language is clear and correct and is suitable to students’ ages and
interests. The teacher’s use of academic vocabulary is precise and serves to extend student
understanding.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher states clearly, at some point during the lesson, what the students will be learning.
The teacher’s explanation of content is clear and invites student participation and thinking.
The teacher makes no content errors.
The teacher describes specific strategies students might use, inviting students to interpret them
in the context of what they’re learning.
Students engage with the learning task, indicating that they understand what they are to do.
If appropriate, the teacher models the process to be followed in the task.
The teacher’s vocabulary and usage are correct and entirely suited to the lesson, including,
where appropriate, explanations of academic vocabulary.
The teacher’s vocabulary is appropriate to students’ ages and levels of development.
The teacher’s attempt to explain the instructional purpose has only limited success, and/or directions and
Level 2 procedures must be clarified after initial student confusion. The teacher’s explanation of the content may
contain minor errors; some portions are clear, others difficult to follow. The teacher’s explanation does
not invite students to engage intellectually or to understand strategies they might use when working
independently. The teacher’s spoken language is correct but uses vocabulary that is either limited or not
fully appropriate to the students’ ages or backgrounds. The teacher rarely takes opportunities to explain
academic vocabulary.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher provides little elaboration or explanation about what the students will be learning.
The teacher’s explanation of the content consists of a monologue, with minimal participation or
intellectual engagement by students.
The teacher makes no serious content errors but may make minor ones.
The teacher’s explanations of content are purely procedural, with no indication of how students
can think strategically.
The teacher must clarify the learning task so students can complete it.
The teacher’s vocabulary and usage are correct but unimaginative.
When the teacher attempts to explain academic vocabulary, it is only partially successful.
The teacher’s vocabulary is too advanced, or too juvenile, for students.
The instructional purpose of the lesson is unclear to students, and the directions and procedures are
Level 1 confusing. The teacher’s explanation of the content contains major errors and does not include any
explanation of strategies students might use. The teacher’s spoken or written language contains errors of
grammar or syntax. The teacher’s academic vocabulary is inappropriate, vague, or used incorrectly,
leaving students confused.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
At no time during the lesson does the teacher convey to students what they will be learning.
Students indicate through body language or questions that they don’t understand the content
being presented.
The teacher makes a serious content error that will affect students’ understanding of the lesson.
Students indicate through their questions that they are confused about the learning task.
The teacher’s communications include errors of vocabulary or usage or imprecise use of
academic language.
The teacher’s vocabulary is inappropriate to the age or culture of the students.
While the teacher may use some low-level questions, he poses questions designed to promote student
Level 3 thinking and understanding. The teacher creates a genuine discussion among students, providing
adequate time for students to respond and stepping aside when doing so is appropriate. The teacher
challenges students to justify their thinking and successfully engages most students in the discussion,
employing a range of strategies to ensure that most students are heard.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher uses open-ended questions, inviting students to think and/or offer multiple possible
answers.
The teacher makes effective use of wait time.
Discussions enable students to talk to one another without ongoing mediation by the teacher.
The teacher calls on most students, even those who don’t initially volunteer.
Many students actively engage in the discussion.
The teacher asks students to justify their reasoning, and most students attempt to do so.
The teacher’s questions lead students through a single path of inquiry, with answers seemingly
Level 2 determined in advance. Alternatively, the teacher attempts to ask some questions designed to engage
students in thinking, but only a few students are involved. The teacher attempts to engage all students in
the discussion, to encourage them to respond to one another, and to explain their thinking, with uneven
results.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher frames some questions designed to promote student thinking, but many have a
single correct answer, and the teacher calls on students quickly.
The teacher invites students to respond directly to one another’s ideas, but few students
respond.
The teacher calls on many students, but only a small number actually participate in the
discussion.
The teacher asks students to explain their reasoning, but only some students attempt to do so.
The teacher’s questions are of low cognitive challenge, with single correct responses, and are asked in
Level 1 rapid succession. Interaction between the teacher and students is predominantly recitation style, with the
teacher mediating all questions and answers; the teacher accepts all contributions without asking
students to explain their reasoning. Only a few students participate in the discussion.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
Questions are rapid-fire and convergent, with a single correct answer.
Questions do not invite student thinking.
All discussion is between the teacher and students; students are not invited to speak directly to
one another.
The teacher does not ask students to explain their thinking.
Only a few students dominate the discussion.
The learning tasks and activities require only minimal thinking by students and little opportunity for them
Level 2 to explain their thinking, allowing most students to be passive or merely compliant. The lesson has a
recognizable structure; however, the pacing of the lesson may not provide students the time needed to
be intellectually engaged or may be so slow that many students have a considerable amount of
“downtime.”
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
Some students are intellectually engaged in the lesson.
Learning tasks are a mix of those requiring thinking and those requiring recall.
Student engagement with the content is largely passive; the learning consists primarily of facts
or procedures.
Few of the materials and resources require student thinking or ask students to explain their
thinking.
The pacing of the lesson is uneven—suitable in parts but rushed or dragging in others.
The learning tasks/activities, materials, and resources require only rote responses, with only one
Level 1 approach possible. The lesson has no clearly defined structure, or the pace of the lesson is too slow or
rushed.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
Few students are intellectually engaged in the lesson.
Learning tasks/activities and materials require only recall or have a single correct response or
method.
Instructional materials used are unsuitable to the lesson and/or the students.
The lesson drags or is rushed.
Students appear to be aware of the assessment criteria, and the teacher monitors student learning for
Level 3 groups of students. Questions and assessments are regularly used to diagnose evidence of learning.
Teacher feedback to groups of students is accurate and specific; some students engage in self-
assessment. If impromptu measures are needed, the teacher makes a minor adjustment to the lesson
and does so smoothly.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher makes the standards of high-quality work clear to students.
The teacher elicits evidence of student understanding.
Students are invited to assess their own work and make improvements; most of them do so.
Feedback includes specific and timely guidance at least for groups of students.
When improvising becomes necessary, the teacher makes adjustments to the lesson.
Students appear to be only partially aware of the assessment criteria, and the teacher monitors student
Level 2 learning for the class as a whole. Questions and assessments are rarely used to diagnose evidence of
learning. Feedback to students is general, and few students assess their own work. Adjustment of the
lesson in response to assessment is minimal or ineffective.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
There is little evidence that the students understand how their work will be evaluated.
The teacher monitors understanding through a single method, or without eliciting evidence of
understanding from students.
Feedback to students is vague and not oriented toward future improvement of work.
The teacher makes only minor attempts to engage students in self- or peer assessment.
The teacher’s attempts to adjust the lesson are partially successful.
Students do not appear to be aware of the assessment criteria, and there is little or no monitoring of
Level 1 student learning; feedback is absent or of poor quality. Students do not engage in self- or peer
assessment, and the teacher makes no attempt to adjust the lesson even when students don’t
understand the content.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher gives no indication of what high-quality work looks like.
The teacher makes no effort to determine whether students understand the lesson.
Students receive no feedback, or feedback is global or directed to only one student.
The teacher does not ask students to evaluate their own or classmates’ work.
The teacher makes no attempt to adjust the lesson in response to student confusion.
The teacher successfully accommodates students’ questions and interests. Drawing on a broad
Level 3 repertoire of strategies, the teacher persists in seeking approaches for students who have difficulty
learning. If impromptu measures are needed, the teacher makes a minor adjustment to the lesson and
does so smoothly.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher incorporates students’ interests and questions into the heart of the lesson.
The teacher conveys to students that she has other approaches to try when the students
experience difficulty.
In reflecting on practice, the teacher cites multiple approaches undertaken to reach students
having difficulty.
When improvising becomes necessary, the teacher makes adjustments to the lesson.
The teacher accepts responsibility for the success of all students but has only a limited repertoire of
Level 2 strategies to use. Adjustment of the lesson in response to assessment is minimal or ineffective.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher makes perfunctory attempts to incorporate students’ questions and interests into
the lesson.
The teacher conveys to students a level of responsibility for their learning but also his
uncertainty about how to assist them.
In reflecting on practice, the teacher indicates the desire to reach all students but does not
suggest strategies for doing so.
The teacher’s attempts to adjust the lesson are partially successful.
The teacher ignores students’ questions; when students have difficulty learning, the teacher blames them
Level 1 or their home environment for their lack of success. The teacher makes no attempt to adjust the lesson
even when students don’t understand the content.
CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
The teacher ignores indications of student boredom or lack of understanding.
The teacher brushes aside students’ questions.
The teacher conveys to students that when they have difficulty learning it is their fault.
In reflecting on practice, the teacher does not indicate that it is important to reach all students.
The teacher makes no attempt to adjust the lesson in response to student confusion.