You would know that hardly happens in reality if you were a teacher. |
You are off base. Can’t even tell what you would possibly base this bizarre, invalid “feeling” on. Don’t be one of those parents who think you know better than actual educators. |
I teach in a title 1 middle school. I have been asked to commit grade fraud on more than one occasion by administrators. I think that is a common scenario in MCPS. |
I call BS |
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Heck no.
My son works his tail off and he was given Bs with 89.4 in AP world and 89.2 in precalculus. Of course those are in the B range but nobody has ever tipped him over to an A even if he’s crazy close! |
They are mathematically As, just not the mathematics you want MCPS to use. So sorry. |
+1. All you have to do is look at the profiles mcps high schools send colleges to see how rampant grade inflation has become. Over 50% of students have a 4.0 or better. If you have any Bs you are literally in the bottom half of the class. |
50% over a 4.0 weighted or unweighted? |
| The highest unweighted grade is a 4.0 so obviously the poster means weighted. |
I get that the crazy RWNJs love this narrative but it's not more likely than anything else. |
| We tell the students to put your name on the paper for 50 percent. This teaches the kids 1/100th of an assignment equals 50%. That's called mcps math. And no it does not make sense and is part of the forever lowering the bar game |
Share a link, not of a magnet program but an entire high school that has 50 percent with 4.0. |
Shhh! Stop ruining my false narrative! |
MCPS essentially has a 5-point scale because most classes are at the honors level or higher (the top GPA must be very close to a 5.0- maybe a 4.9 with required non-weighted classes, but more realistically around a 4.85) so that is not actually surprising. In my kid's high school 41% have a weighted 4.0 or above. Of those, 19% have a 4.51 and above. The percentage of students who go to 4-year colleges is very similar to the number who have a 4.0 weighted and above (38%). |
Not really. There are many ways to calculate grades. |