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The rubric is the most common tool for assessment in the Kenyan Competency Based
Curriculum (CBC). However, flaws and inconsistencies in its use have been a major
concern. The objectives of this research were to examine the competencies of teachers
in using the rubric for assessing reading aloud tasks in Early Years Education (EYE),
the extent to which expected learning outcomes of reading aloud tasks were true to the
criteria of assessment rubrics, the consistency of rating learners’ reading aloud tasks
with the use of assessment rubrics and the challenges teachers encountered as they used
rubrics to assess learning outcomes of reading aloud tasks in EYE. The study was
anchored on the pragmatic paradigm and was based on Biggs, Tang, and Kennedy’s
Constructive Alignment Theory. It was conducted in selected schools in Kesses Sub-
County in Uasin Gishu County. The mixed method approach was adopted for the study
through the convergent mixed-parallel research design. Slovin’s formula was used to
obtain a sample of 115 teachers of Grade 3 drawn from 139 primary schools in the five
educational zones in Kesses subcounty by stratified and simple random sampling
techniques. Data for the study was collected using a questionnaire, document, analysis,
observation schedule and Focus Group Discussion (FGD). Data analysis followed the
convergent parallel design wherein quantitative and qualitative data was collected and
analyzed concurrently. The quantitative data were analyzed by computing frequencies,
percentages and means while presenting them in tables and plotting of charts and
graphs. Kandall’s Coefficient of Concordance (W) was used to determine the level of
agreement among raters of a reading aloud task. The qualitative data was coded and
collapsed into broad themes and analyzed through detailed descriptions of the emerging
themes. The study revealed that 106(92.17%) of the teachers were adequately
proficient, 76(66.08%) strictly adhered to requirements of the marking scheme for the
rubric criteria. With a Kendall's coefficient of concordance (W) of .801, assessment of
reading aloud tasks was found to be consistent across raters, though comprehensive use
of the rubric was hampered due to inadequate time when dealing with large classes and
difficulty in converting rubric scores into grades among other challenges. The study
concluded that although the rubric is an invaluable tool for teachers in objective
assessment of reading aloud tasks, teachers did not use it to the expected quality to
fairly distinguish the level of performances of learners’ reading aloud tasks. The
researcher hopes that the findings will benefit EYE teachers, curriculum developers and
policy makers by increasing understanding of the rubric for optimal support for reading
aloud. The study proposed expanded learning of the rubric both in the initial and the in-
service training of teachers, introduction of dummy marking before the actual marking,
creation of funded INSETs and development of a manual to guide teachers’ efficient
use of the rubric. To address the limitations for comprehensive use and to provide
appropriate interventions for the rubric in assessing reading aloud, this study suggests
that further research should be carried out to examine if tutors in the teacher training
institutions are competent enough to train teachers about the rubric, how learners utilize
the rubric to track their own performance, whether teachers have a good command of
the language used in designing rubrics and that the study be replicated in other sites in
Kenya to get a broader scrutiny of the genesis of discrepancies in the use of the
assessment rubric. |
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