YES, but I suggest getting a tutor immediately, maybe twice a week, and buckling down for prioritizing math every day. Your kid can do it! |
+1 Keep in mind, this is review math. |
At our school, only summative grades count. And there are few of them. SBG lowers grades for otherwise A students. This is why parents are complaining about it. But at least it affects all students, not just some, as FCPS rolls it out to every school. |
at ours, it's 65% summative, 30% formative, and 5% practice. An 82% with no summative scores on the books yet can easily turn into an A if the kid gets As on midterms and finals. That's pretty much my kid. If you give them a 5 question quiz, they will find a way to miss one. If you give them a 50 or 100 question test, they will usually miss one or two questions. |
So when your school moves to SBG, you will hate it too. Your A student will become a B student. And posters will say it's because they're not a good student, lack mastery, etc. |
Is this the same OP whose kid skipped precalculus because he annoyed the staff so much they invited him to try and fail? |
How does SBG change grades? Because they have more tests and no retakes? |
What is SBG? |
Standards Based Grading |
My kids does great on tests. It's the quick quizes that trip them up. SBG will be great from them |
Missing one question on a test is a B. And there are no other grades that are counted. |
OP here, it is a rolling grade book, no SBG, was a poor grade on a summative test. DS has always been strong in math. Not sure what happened? Has never scored less than a 90 on a test. In Alg 1 - Pre-Cacl would finish the year with a nothing less than a 98% usually. I just lined up a tutor. I didn't consider twice a week but may not that someone said it. |
Our school only does SBG in English, no other courses. |
Geez, let your kid breathe. Let your kid learn to fail, learn that sometimes you're just average. And that's ok. |