As a teacher, I have had no say in all the changes the district and my school made to grading policies the past couple of years - including the requirement that teachers accept all late work and grade it with no penalty. That’s had quite the psychological effect on students - and as you can guess, it’s not a good one. All of the policies are designed to get more students to pass classes and boost stats for school principals with career ambitions. All of them have made the teachers’ jobs more difficult. |
Final grades for 9th-11th are sent to colleges. However, quarterly/semester grades for senior year do get sent to colleges. With traditional grading, a student might have Q1 - C, Q2-A. With rolling gradebook, a student would have Q1-C, Q2-B. Which set of quarterly grades would you rather send to colleges? |
Don't YOU want to know how you are progressing toward your final grade in the course? Why would you want the false-optimism of a limited-time-grade? Which do you prefer....truth or shaded-fiction? |
Well, I know I'd rather not base 4 years of grading policy on seniors applying to college alone. As I posted earlier, my kid getting a first quarter progress grade of c would en normally discourage him. Knowing he can bring his final grade up is keeping him moving |
If you don't want quarter-based grades, then "progress reports" are not needed either. One report card only. Does that sound good to you? |
I see you like to argue your nonsense until the bitter end. Progress reports (three times a year) give parents and kids a cumulative update on where they stand as they approach the final grade. There's a lot more opportunity to change the grade early in the year (when more assignments are yet-to-come), and less opportunity to impact the final grade when there are fewer assignments left. Pace yourself accordingly. |
+1 |
DP Students can tell how they're doing with a quarterly grading approach too; they just average their quarterly grades, same as they always have. Not sure that rolling gradebook conveys any better information to students on how they’re doing. FCPS acknowledged that the primary benefit of rolling gradebook is to increase opportunities for students to show mastery and they encouraged teachers to adjust late work and retake policies to take advantage of the extra leeway rolling gradebook provides. Thus, the main attraction of rolling gradebook seems to be that it facilitates equity grading. |
Either — I mean, colleges know what kind of grade book method your school is using. |
The main attraction of a rolling gradebook is it facilitates teachers not having to grade assignments in a timely manner, which they simply refuse to do. |
They are only working “ contract hours” so they won’t be grading till the ends, already two weeks behind on grading smh |