Anonymous wrote:If it were my kid, I would have her take it over the summer. It is on zoom and will help reinforce the concepts.
Anonymous wrote:If it were my kid, I would have her take it over the summer. It is on zoom and will help reinforce the concepts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She receives the grade she earned
+1
On a similar note, I promised my daughter an incentive for getting straight A’s but in her Spanish class she is an 89.4%. Does not look like show get an a. I could encourage her to appeal to her teacher to bump her up, but that wouldn’t be fair since she didn’t earn that grade. Sometimes life is not fair.
It never hurts to ask, as a teacher I will change the grade only IF they asked me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She receives the grade she earned
+1
On a similar note, I promised my daughter an incentive for getting straight A’s but in her Spanish class she is an 89.4%. Does not look like show get an a. I could encourage her to appeal to her teacher to bump her up, but that wouldn’t be fair since she didn’t earn that grade. Sometimes life is not fair.
Anonymous wrote:She receives the grade she earned
Anonymous wrote:She can ask. The teacher can always say no. Unless you feel there’s been an injustice, please let your child advocate for themselves.
Also, get your child a tutor over the summer, otherwise it will only get worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MY Daughter had a D for the 3rd quarter and 59 E for the 4th quarter. Since she is less than half point away from getting the credit for Spanish 2B for the course, should the teacher changed the grade to D?
I really don't know if I should say anything knowing she didn't do any extra credit or anything, but it likely for the teacher to fail a student by just one point?
Why do you want to save your daughter from her poor choices? Let her get the E. I think a D + E is still a D for the semester grade anyway.
But regardless, you should not be MORE concerned about your daughter "failing by 1 point" than by the fact that she is failing at all, and that you didn't catch this beforehand. Accountability matters.
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/schools/high-schools/k-q/qohs/mark_pattern.pdf
According to the n/Semester Grade Calculations
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MY Daughter had a D for the 3rd quarter and 59 E for the 4th quarter. Since she is less than half point away from getting the credit for Spanish 2B for the course, should the teacher changed the grade to D?
I really don't know if I should say anything knowing she didn't do any extra credit or anything, but it likely for the teacher to fail a student by just one point?
Why do you want to save your daughter from her poor choices? Let her get the E. I think a D + E is still a D for the semester grade anyway.
But regardless, you should not be MORE concerned about your daughter "failing by 1 point" than by the fact that she is failing at all, and that you didn't catch this beforehand. Accountability matters.
Anonymous wrote:MY Daughter had a D for the 3rd quarter and 59 E for the 4th quarter. Since she is less than half point away from getting the credit for Spanish 2B for the course, should the teacher changed the grade to D?
I really don't know if I should say anything knowing she didn't do any extra credit or anything, but it likely for the teacher to fail a student by just one point?