Nope. I’m a teacher. It’s a horrible disservice especially since no college or trade school grades on such a high curve. Also what job give you half a paycheck for not doing any work? Everyone needs to be on the same page. Full stop. |
I don't understand. The regulation, linked earlier in the thread, literally says "if a student does no work on the task/assessment, the teacher will assign a zero." What is preventing you from assigning a zero? |
Because that so-called teacher is a troll. In the case above, the 50% is a placeholder. |
Well, also no college assigns the amount of insane busy work that McPs teachers do. The 50% rule was hugely helpful when my kids were out for a week with flu or whatever and needed to make up a million assignments while also recovering and getting back up to speed. Even my straight A student gojng to a top 10 college occasionally took advantage of the 50% rule. I just don’t think comparing to college or the workplace is useful — I’ve never met a college professor or employer that required you to do things like turn in your notes for credit. HS is set up differently, for reasons that I understand and largely agree with, but it’ means that college and the workplace are not apt comparisons. Anyway. We were told at BTSN there is no more 50% rule. |
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Anyway. Many schools are still enacting this at the middle school level. And I guess you are SO clever to know how much work is actually graded. Talk to a college professor if you don’t believe comparing this is relevant. |
What "news reports"? And why do you care but not enough to ask your school? |
If teachers are copying their canvas course from the previous year, that 50% default grade may still be set from when we were required to give 50% even on missing work. You might want to ask the teacher to change the default to 0 for missing work so that students can see the effect if they don’t complete the work. |
Various student newspapers covered it plus some local Moco outlet. Don't you read? |