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IHP505CaseStudyGuidelinesandRubric.pdf

IHP 505 Case Study Guidelines and Rubric Overview: Critical thinking is a habit of mind characterized by the comprehensive exploration of issues, ideas, artifacts, and events before accepting or formulating an opinion or conclusion. Case studies are meant to connect real-world scenarios with theoretical teachings. You are expected to test assumptions and find creative ways to consider all the facets contributing to analysis of the case. Prompt: Use the case study provided in each prompt to respond to the required questions. In your submission, consider your own and others’ assumptions and the relevant contexts, and provide a conclusion that reflects your informed evaluation.

Rubric Guidelines for Submission: Each case study must be submitted as a 2- to 3-page Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, one-inch margins, and at least three sources cited in APA format. Critical Elements Proficient (100%) Needs Improvement (75%) Not Evident (0%) Value

Explanation of Issues

Issue/problem to be considered is stated clearly and described comprehensively, delivering all relevant information necessary for full understanding

Issue/problem to be considered is stated, but description leaves some terms undefined, ambiguities unexplored, boundaries undetermined, and/or backgrounds unknown

Issue/problem is not stated 15

Evidence Information is taken from the case with enough interpretation/evaluation to develop a comprehensive analysis or synthesis

Information is taken from the case with some interpretation/evaluation, but not enough to develop a coherent analysis or synthesis

Information is not taken from the case with enough interpretation/evaluation to develop a comprehensive analysis or synthesis

25

Influence of Context and Assumptions

Thoroughly (systematically and methodically) analyzes own (if applicable) and others’ assumptions and carefully evaluates the relevance of contexts when presenting a position

Identifies own and others’ assumptions and several relevant contexts when presenting a position

Does not identify own and others’ assumptions or relevant contexts when presenting a position

25

Conclusions Conclusions and related outcomes (consequences and implications) are logical and reflect an informed evaluation

Conclusion is logically tied to a range of information

Does not provide a conclusion 25

Articulation of Response

Submission has no major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization

Submission has major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that negatively impact readability and articulation of main ideas

Submission has critical errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that prevent understanding of ideas

10

Total 100%