Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 50% rule officially reads: The following grading practices are prohibited: Assigning a grade lower than 50 percent to a task/assessment. However, if a student does no work on the task/assessment, the teacher will assign a zero. If a teacher determines the student did not attempt to meet the basic requirements of the task/assessment or the student engaged in academic dishonesty, the teacher may assign a zero.
I have taught at schools where we could never give below a 50%. Others that say that we can give a zero if we had two way communication with the parents about a missing assignment.
https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/ikara.pdf
What is written above is the official BOE policy. A few years back, Central Office staff decided that parents should be contacted if a student is to receive a zero. That is when the rule of two way communication was started. However, this was not an official MCPS policy as dictated by the BOE. It was a "rule" decided upon by the Central Office staff who cannot actually make policy without the BOE's consent. As a result, different schools and even departments within a school have different procedures in place.
I do wonder -- is there a difference in passing rates, student engagement, student achievement, etc between schools giving zeros and schools with the mandatory 50%?
Can I ask a very basic question? I don’t recall any teachers contacting my parents about any assignments ever. Yes this was 30 years ago and in my case I am sure I turned in all assignments on time. But why do teachers need to involve parents in two-way communication? Can’t they just speak directly to the students? It’s much more efficient to stay on top of grading, and post in the portal if parents are interested in knowing. If the students are chronically absent, then obviously the school should be in touch to determine root causes/barriers. But why on earth would a teacher need to notify parents about every missing assignment? That’s so much extra paperwork.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 50% rule officially reads: The following grading practices are prohibited: Assigning a grade lower than 50 percent to a task/assessment. However, if a student does no work on the task/assessment, the teacher will assign a zero. If a teacher determines the student did not attempt to meet the basic requirements of the task/assessment or the student engaged in academic dishonesty, the teacher may assign a zero.
I have taught at schools where we could never give below a 50%. Others that say that we can give a zero if we had two way communication with the parents about a missing assignment.
https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/ikara.pdf
What is written above is the official BOE policy. A few years back, Central Office staff decided that parents should be contacted if a student is to receive a zero. That is when the rule of two way communication was started. However, this was not an official MCPS policy as dictated by the BOE. It was a "rule" decided upon by the Central Office staff who cannot actually make policy without the BOE's consent. As a result, different schools and even departments within a school have different procedures in place.
I do wonder -- is there a difference in passing rates, student engagement, student achievement, etc between schools giving zeros and schools with the mandatory 50%?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a high school teacher at Wheaton. We are not allowed to give anything below a 50% in the All Task Category (90% of the grade). If the student “tries” (basically puts their name on it), we have to give at least a 55%.
For the Practice Prep Category (10% of the grade), we are allowed to give 0% for assignments not turned in by the due date. Some teachers still give 50%. IMO, PP is worth so little of the grade, a 0% does nothing. I don’t give 50% for PP because I feel like it’s the only piece of accountability the teacher still has left. I also refuse to grade tons of late PP at the end of the quarter. It literally stands for “Practice.” If the kids are not practicing on time, what good does it do to turn it in last minute?
Anonymous wrote:The 50% rule officially reads: The following grading practices are prohibited: Assigning a grade lower than 50 percent to a task/assessment. However, if a student does no work on the task/assessment, the teacher will assign a zero. If a teacher determines the student did not attempt to meet the basic requirements of the task/assessment or the student engaged in academic dishonesty, the teacher may assign a zero.
I have taught at schools where we could never give below a 50%. Others that say that we can give a zero if we had two way communication with the parents about a missing assignment.
https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/ikara.pdf
Anonymous wrote:The 50% rule officially reads: The following grading practices are prohibited: Assigning a grade lower than 50 percent to a task/assessment. However, if a student does no work on the task/assessment, the teacher will assign a zero. If a teacher determines the student did not attempt to meet the basic requirements of the task/assessment or the student engaged in academic dishonesty, the teacher may assign a zero.
I have taught at schools where we could never give below a 50%. Others that say that we can give a zero if we had two way communication with the parents about a missing assignment.
https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/ikara.pdf
Anonymous wrote:At my DS high school, it is a 0 if a PP assignment is not turned in by the due date, but 50% in the AT category. At least that’s what he understands.