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Any teachers here to maybe help explain a perplexing problem?

I wrote two essays for my college English class. The first one I half-assed on revising and editing. I'll admit that because I was really rusty. I've been out of school for about 11 years and trying to adjust to 8 week courses in an academic setting was stressful at best. I rushed that essay. The result was 7 points being deducted from a perfect score.

Then I wrote the second essay. I did refine it, even incorporating other skills I've learned through self study because I know I was capable of doing better. I listened to my professor's desire for a more lively voice versus the typical flat academic paper. That is definitely something in my wheelhouse because I write narrative prose, and that's an element of writing that's transferable. Also, I took special care in applying the three different type of appeals in this essay. The first one lacked pathos and ethos, so I was sure to add that in. Guess what? 7 points deducted.

I compared the rubric for both essays looking at the margins.
Body development: -3 points.
Structure & organization: -2 points.
MLA format: -2 points.
All of these were the same for both! I'm not entirely sure why the format didn't change because I did correct things in the second essay. This was after I skimmed through the 14 pages in the MLA handbook. Some stuff did not apply to the paper, others did. Otherwise, I copied the format mostly from the textbook example of an academic paper in MLA format.

I would've thought that the quality of the paper improving would reflect in the grading. I mean, it should have considering how raw the first essay was compared to the second. I'm perplexed. I already know what I'm going to do for my final one to get more insight. The university has resources for that. I just wanted to get people's opinions.
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RunTheJulz · 46-50, F
Perhaps it’s not something that you did but it is the professors way of grading. It could be that no matter how well you write the grading is done without much attention paid to the subject. I don’t want to say that your professor is lazy but it’s definitely possible.
RedGrizzly · 26-30, F
@RunTheJulz True. There's like 50 people in the class. Reading 50 papers on the same subject, across different skill levels, can be daunting for anyone. Especially, if she graded my essay towards the end of it. I'm going to submit my final essay to the writing center because they could point out what specifically about it is causing the road block. If their feedback doesn't match the reoccurring pattern of getting 7 points deducted in the three areas on the rubric, then it very could be the instructor's grading style or the essay doesn't have the same holes as the last two. I'll find out once it's graded. In any case, I'm still doing really well in the class overall. I just always like to seek improvement in my writing.
Whether the rubric recognizes it or not, the quality of the second essay has definitely improved. It's possible it didn't improve in the way the rubric was grading for? Idk. I'm going to send my final essay off to the writing center to be analyzed.