Yeah, I thought this was even worse than last year. |
So how is this an improvement? |
Hahahaha! They just sent out a survey last week. Retroactive feedback, I guess. We found out about the report cards just a few months before you did. |
Understatement of the century! |
Last year there was no "Exceeds Expectations" so the best a kid could do was get a "Meets". Each quarter the teacher would pick the substandard that were covered that quarter and give students and "Approaching" or a "Meets Expectations.". But the standards were completely random and obscure so you had no idea what your kid had learned. For instance, in Q4 my kid in math got a Meets Expectations for: 2.6b determines sums and differences using various methods. [What methods? Are they proficient?] 2.6c. Created and solves problems using addition and subtraction [What sorts of problems?] 2.16 Identify, transfer, create and extend patterns found in nature, pictures and shapes [Wasn't this what they did in preschool at the pattern table?] That's it for math. Science had gems like "Student will understand that plants provide oxygen" and history had "Student will understand that people of the United States made contributions to their communities." Oh, PE had this great one too: "Describe flexibility as important in moving in many directions." What the heck does that mean? One problem was that if your kid got an Approaching, that standard never showed up again to tell you if they ultimately learned it. And if you look at the list of standards that were shared in report cards, they don't add up to what they were supposed to learn that year. They're just random bits that aren't clear and don't add up to a whole picture. Totally worthless. This year the report cards should at least be somewhat helpful in Q3 and Q4. |
My kids are older now (middle and high school) so I can tell you another downside to standards based grading, and why the middle school teachers in particular don’t like it. Our kids hit 6th grade and have no idea how to calibrate the time and effort they need to be successful in school. The over-achieving type kids freak out if they don’t get 100% on everything, because they aren’t used to getting anything marked up on their papers. They don’t understand that an A is an A in APS, regardless of whether you get a 90% or a 100%. (Unlike FCPS, APS doesn’t give an A-.) Then there are the smart, but laid back kids who have skated through elementary school with half-ass effort, but nobody called them out because their SOL scores were okay. Those kids start getting Bs and Cs when they don’t turn in work or don’t study, and they don’t even realize why they need to care. Both groups get ignored from an academic and social-emotional perspective, because APS middle and high schools are huge, so the focus is on the kids who are truly struggling to meet grade standards. It is unfortunate too, because a lot of these kids will take high-school credit math and language classes starting in 7th grade. They have no idea what that means. We should be bringing back the A-B-C scale at least for 5th grade, so the kids have a less pressured year to adjust to real grades and understand why they matter on transcripts. |
This reply is really validating! A PP asked if we all had first/only kids. I'll admit my kid is a first kid, and I don't know what I should be doing to help with this calibration. Maybe SOLs will give a better sense of how she's doing? |
Meh. Most kids are not taking algebra in 7th grade. Most are taking a language. But it’s also very easy to drop the high school credits taken in middle school off transcript and in fact many kids who get As in them do because with weighting it helps their GPA to drop them. Middle school IS the time to sort out all the things you are describing. How to study, how to plan work, what to do when you bomb a test, learning how to advocate to the teacher or ask for help. That’s what it’s for and it’s a good time to do it. Let elementary school be elementary school. |
APS isn't helping kids do that in middle school. Very little homework and no effort to build executive functioning skills. |
Tell that to my kid who has spent the last two weekends doing nothing but homework as a 7th grader in APS. |
DHMS Algebra? |
How many complete novels have been assigned reading this year? |
Ok not my kids experience in middle school. It ramps up a good amount by 8th grade. |
Maybe exec functioning things should be taught at home by parents and not expected that schools teach it? |
Gunston Algebra and Intensified English paper |