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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "Unreasonable teachers "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It’s tough when teachers use AP multiple choice questions and base their grade on the percentage correct. In order to get a 5 you don’t need to get 90% correct. So for example APUSH, 60-65 percent will have you most likely passing with a 3 on the actual AP Test. 70 percent is 4 territory. 80 percent will get you a 5. It is really rare to get 100% on any AP test. But if teachers give tests from released questions they have access to and use a traditional grading scales, students find getting A’s challenging. [/quote] I do this. But then I curve grades. In my AP course a 50% in may is generally a 3 on the exam, so I curve test scores so that 50% becomes a C-, 65% becomes a B-, and an 80% becomes an A-. That is a smidge tougher than college board's scoring (it's pretty close to 50 (3)/60 (4)/ 75 (5) in reality) but I figure my unit tests on a small chunk of limited standards are easier than the test in May with a year's worth of material and a much longer block of time. The reality is that at the beginning of the year kids don't perform at a "5" level. I am grading on an AP rubric, giving timely feedback, lots of practice, lots of opportunities to clarify, but it takes a couple of units to understand the AP way of responding to FRQs. By November/December I've got them trained and I usually suggest saving retakes on FRQs until then. It's built in spiral review to study for unit 1/2/3 in December, and the content will feel easier at that point anyway. By May, my gradebook will be 80% As and Bs, 15% Cs, and 1 or 2 Ds. Right now, with 1 test on the books, it's 30% Ds and I have a couple of Fs. Some will drop when they realize the class is hard, but most will rise to the challenge and improve. Obviously some of my colleagues are lazy (sorry), but some of us are legitimately training your children to perform at a higher level and they just aren't there yet.[/quote] I also teach AP and I agree with most of what PP is saying, particularly in the first paragraph. However, there's another thing to take into account. FCPS has open enrollment (you can pick whichever level you want to be in), and for the last two years teachers have been told that we can't even tell a student they're not ready for a given class when the time comes to select courses. I teach a STEM AP course and I have students with low grades in the minimal prereq who somehow decided that AP was the right choice for them at this point in time. Their performance is abysmal. This year I'm inflating grades at the bottom even more than usual so they pass in order to get admin and parents off my back. I just don't have the energy for the drama and my time is better spent teaching.[/quote]
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