Reviewing Grades
For teachersThe Unified Gradebook
Quizzibility consolidates all grading data — assignments, live session participation, code submissions, and activity sequences — into a single gradebook per course section. You do not need to visit separate pages for quiz grades versus code assignment grades; everything appears in one table with students as rows and assignments as columns.
The gradebook supports two viewing modes that you can toggle between:
Points view shows raw or percentage scores for each assignment. This is the traditional gradebook layout — each cell contains a number, and column headers show the assignment name and point total.
Mastery view shows S/NY marks for each specification rather than per-assignment scores. Each column is a spec, and each cell is either green (Satisfactory) or gray (Not Yet). The rightmost columns show which grade bundle each student currently qualifies for. This view is only available if you have configured mastery grading for the course.
Student Scorecards
Clicking on any student's name opens their scorecard — a detailed view of that individual's performance across all assignments and specs. The scorecard shows submission history, timestamps, and (for mastery grading) which specs have been satisfied and which are still outstanding. This is the view to use during office hours when a student asks "what do I still need for a B?"
Students see their own scorecard from their dashboard. It shows the same data without other students' information.
CSV Export
When you need to transfer grades to your institution's LMS, use the CSV export function. Quizzibility exports in a format compatible with Canvas's grade import — columns are assignments, rows are students, and the first row contains point totals. If your LMS uses a different format, the CSV is straightforward enough to transform with a spreadsheet.
Export is section-scoped: you choose which section to export, and only that section's students and grades appear in the file.
Practical Tips
Review grades promptly after assignments close — students check their scores quickly and timely feedback is more useful than delayed feedback. For mastery grading, pay attention to students who are close to the next bundle threshold; a quick email about which specs they still need can be highly motivating.
Use the gradebook's sort and filter features to identify students who are falling behind early. Sorting by total score or number of satisfied specs surfaces at-risk students quickly.