“…In content-driven programs where subject specialists teach their subject matter, students’ compositions are predominantly evaluated on their content. Rubrics employed in these courses commonly entail multiple specific content-related criteria, without dividing linguistic features into minute elements as frequently seen in L2 writing assessment and language-driven CLIL (e.g., Bean & Melzer, 2021; Bukhari et al, 2021; Gao et al, 2019; Garza et al, 2021; Walvoord & Anderson, 2010). For example, the following nine criteria exist in a rubric used at two U.S. universities to assess first-year students’ compositions, including engagement with external sources, originality of the contention, clarity of the contention, effectiveness of supporting evidence, presentation of the writer’s own idea, organization, source use, language style, use of standard written English, and formatting (Walvoord & Anderson, 2010).…”