rubric_calibration_vectors: 15
This data as json
| id | skill_code | dimension | level | sample_response | context_passage | style_tag | student_facing | created_at |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | RL-EVIDENCE | performance | 4 | Jay's reaction to the move doesn't stay in one place. When his dad tells him at the kitchen table, Jay just says "Okay." and goes back to his game, which looks like he's totally fine. But later, when he's packing, he finds an old note from his friend that just says "See you tomorrow" and he sits on the floor for a long time, holding it. The narrator describes his face as 'a mask of quiet recognition'—that moment makes you realize the "Okay." wasn't calm, it was a way to shut down. The story gets even more complicated when you look at something from earlier. The narrator says he was 'good at goodbye because he never really says hello. At first that just seems like a comment about his personality, but after the note scene it changes meaning. Now it reads like a survival tactic, something he's been practicing before the move even happened. Together, the two passages create tension: one makes him seem detached, the other shows that the detachment is how he handles pain. So Jay's reaction isn't just shock or sadness—it's a whole way of being that the move drags into the open, and reading his earlier coldness next to the quiet moment with the note makes the whole story feel like a countdown he already knows the ending to. | After reading the short story 'Packing Boxes' by Lila Chen, students were asked to write a paragraph explaining how the protagonist, Jay, reacts to the news that his family is moving across the country. Use at least one piece of evidence from the text. | quote_mishandled | 1 | 2026-05-26 02:57:55 |