Executive SummaryCurrent literature provides many examples of rubrics that are used to evaluate the quality of webquest designs. However, reliability of these rubrics has not yet been researched. This is the first study to fully characterize and assess the reliability of a webquest evaluation rubric. The ZUNAL rubric was created to utilize the strengths of the currently available rubrics and improved based on the comments provided in the literature and feedback received from the educators.The ZUNAL webquest design rubric was developed in three stages. First, a large set of rubric items was generated based on the operational definitions and existing literature on currently available webquest rubrics (version 1). This step included item selections from the three most widely used rubrics created by Bellofatto, Bohl, Casey, Krill & Dodge (2001), March (2004), and eMints (2006). Second, students (n=15) enrolled in a graduate course titled "Technology and Data" were asked to assess the clarity of each item of the rubric on a four-point scale ranging from (1) "not at all" to (4) "very well/very clear." This scale was used only during the construction of the ZUNAL rubric; therefore, it was not a part of the analyses presented in this study. The students were also asked to supply written feedback for items that were either unclear or unrelated to the constructs. Items were revised based on the feedback (version 2,). Finally, K-12 classroom teachers (n=23) that are involved with webquest creation and implementation in classrooms were invited for a survey that asked them to rate rubric elements for their value and clarity. Items were revised based on the feedback. At the conclusion of this three-step process, the webquest design rubric was composed of nine main indicators with 23 items underlying the proposed webquest rubric constructs: title (4 items), introduction (1 item), task (2 items), process (3 items), resources (3 items), evaluation (2 items), conclusion (2 items), teacher page (2 items) and overall design (4 items). A three-point response scale including "unacceptable", "acceptable", and "target" was utilized.After the rubric was created, twentythree participants were given a week to evaluate three pre-selected webquests with varying quality using the latest version of the rubric. A month later, the evaluators were asked to re-evaluate the same webquests.Material published as part of this publication, either on-line or in print, is copyrighted by the Informing Science Institute. Permission to make digital or paper copy of part or all of these works for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that the copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage AND that copies 1) bear this notice in full and 2) give the full citation on the first page. It is permissible to abstract these works so long as credit is given. To copy in all other cases or to republish or to post on a server or to redistribute to lists requires specific permission and payment of a fee. Contact Publisher@Inform...