This rubric evaluates one-act plays based on their plot, characters, theme, setting, dialogue, and conventions. Plays are scored out of 200 total points, with the highest scores going to those that have a clear beginning, middle and end; well-developed protagonist and antagonist; one major theme conveyed through the type of play; a clear setting established through dialogue or staging; dialogue that incorporates all story elements and follows proper form; and correct use of dramatic writing conventions.
This rubric evaluates one-act plays based on their plot, characters, theme, setting, dialogue, and conventions. Plays are scored out of 200 total points, with the highest scores going to those that have a clear beginning, middle and end; well-developed protagonist and antagonist; one major theme conveyed through the type of play; a clear setting established through dialogue or staging; dialogue that incorporates all story elements and follows proper form; and correct use of dramatic writing conventions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This rubric evaluates one-act plays based on their plot, characters, theme, setting, dialogue, and conventions. Plays are scored out of 200 total points, with the highest scores going to those that have a clear beginning, middle and end; well-developed protagonist and antagonist; one major theme conveyed through the type of play; a clear setting established through dialogue or staging; dialogue that incorporates all story elements and follows proper form; and correct use of dramatic writing conventions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd