Gpa and variance in grading?

Anonymous
How do colleges account for this? Same high school may have two teachers teaching the same subject who grade very differently.
Anonymous
Grades are not comparable. They just give a general idea compared to other kids from the same school over the course of the 4 years. I think class selection is more important now with no SATs.
Anonymous
Do you seriously think colleges can know which Brit Lit teacher is an easy grader at your school?
Anonymous
Counselors clue them in sometimes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Counselors clue them in sometimes.


I was going to say this---it could come out in the counselor rec or through conversations with college guidance.

I know that our school (private school) will tell all college reps that come through that the honors precalc is a weed-out, beast of a class. Something like 10% of kids get an A in it and getting a B is doing quite well.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Counselors clue them in sometimes.


The counselor letter is literally the most important thing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Counselors clue them in sometimes.


The counselor letter is literally the most important thing.


Absolutely frightening if your kid attends a large, high performing public high school where most of the students couldn't pick out their counselor in a police lineup.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Counselors clue them in sometimes.


I was going to say this---it could come out in the counselor rec or through conversations with college guidance.

I know that our school (private school) will tell all college reps that come through that the honors precalc is a weed-out, beast of a class. Something like 10% of kids get an A in it and getting a B is doing quite well.


Except that is uniform across the grade. They won’t say teacher X is a harsh grader while teacher Y is all rainbows.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:How do colleges account for this? Same high school may have two teachers teaching the same subject who grade very differently.


They don’t. That’s just life unfortunately.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How do colleges account for this? Same high school may have two teachers teaching the same subject who grade very differently.


They don’t. That’s just life unfortunately.


+1
Anonymous
Most say nothing.

If you get the chance put it in your parent questionnaire
Anonymous
Colleges get a sheet from the high schools that tells them things like the breakdown of grades over the senior class...like % of 4.5 % over 4.0 etc. It tells them which schools have lots of grade inflation and which do not. They know that MCPS is basically out of 5 with huge numbers of kids have over 4.0 and 4.5
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Colleges get a sheet from the high schools that tells them things like the breakdown of grades over the senior class...like % of 4.5 % over 4.0 etc. It tells them which schools have lots of grade inflation and which do not. They know that MCPS is basically out of 5 with huge numbers of kids have over 4.0 and 4.5


It also has a breakdown of AP exams scores so they can get a feel of the teaching quality..
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Grades are not comparable. They just give a general idea compared to other kids from the same school over the course of the 4 years. I think class selection is more important now with no SATs.


Even class selection isn't comparable because not all schools offer honors/APs/classes that look by their titles to be more rigorous than others.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Colleges get a sheet from the high schools that tells them things like the breakdown of grades over the senior class...like % of 4.5 % over 4.0 etc. It tells them which schools have lots of grade inflation and which do not. They know that MCPS is basically out of 5 with huge numbers of kids have over 4.0 and 4.5

This isn’t true when kids couldn’t possibly take every class as a highest possible of a 5
Again misinformation
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