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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "HS teachers that give group projects"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I refuse to give group projects. It means I have to grade 4x as many submissions, but I don't feel right allowing any student to get marks for another student's ability/knowledge. Any assessment is individual, completed in class only so that mom/dad can't do it and Johnny can't have Jimmy do his work.[/quote] In English, collaborative work is in the SOL framework. It’s a standard they’re supposed to cover. We do all the group work in class because they’re not large projects and this way we know the parents didn’t do and the kids have to have accountability for how they participated and showed up in their group. [b]But it’s an important skill for them to learn[/b]. [/quote] It’s not. It’s really not. I know someone somewhere in the school admin org chart thinks this, but it’s not true. Kids need to learn how to produce good work on their own. Group projects teaches slackers how to slack. That’s all that comes out of it, and that isn’t good for anyone. It’s not good for the slacker, and it’s not good for the kid who has to pick up their slack. It doesn’t teach them how to function in the real world. It teaches them behaviors that will get them fired. It does reduce the amount of grading that teachers have to do, and I get that our teachers are over worked, but forcing kids to do group projects is not the solution to that problem. [/quote] Wow. I disagree with this. I have to work collaboratively every day at my job with some really difficult people. But I remember this dynamic from high school, and I remember what my business teacher taught me then: getting the job done is what’s most important. And good leaders figure out how to motivate the slackers. And I was hired at my current job because of my reputation for doing this well. [/quote] +1, whenever my daughter complains about a group project I say “welcome to the rest of your life.”[/quote]
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