Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges calculate class rank based on info from the high school profile, their knowledge of the high school,amd a student’s trmscript as few schools provide class rank these days . You can ask your high schook guidance counselor where they think your student falls in the class.
Do FCPS high schools maintain a report detailing grade distribution and GPA deciles? Is it possible for parents to request a copy of this report to determine their student's decile placement?
No and No.
They don’t rank for a reason, it’s to reduce pressure on students over trivial differences in GPA that causes ranking changes.
I went to a high pressure famous public HS in NYC that ranked and kids LOST THEIR SHIT over getting a 96 instead of a 98 on a test because that 0.001 difference in their four year average so they dropped from #16 to #22 (out of 800) and they were convinced Princeton was now forevermore denied to them. People would argue with teachers after every test over 1 or 2 points when they already had 95+ scores on everything.
It’s absolutely poisonous and I will never ever ever support class ranking.
Colleges can easily put all applicants from a given high school in order by GPA. They can situate that data within the data from the last decade. They can even automate the process. The college knows your class rank percentile. It’s just the kids and families who are in the dark.
I get why high schools need to shield their teachers from the monstrous behavior you describe. But don’t kid yourself. Every school that gives grades is effectively ranking the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges calculate class rank based on info from the high school profile, their knowledge of the high school,amd a student’s trmscript as few schools provide class rank these days . You can ask your high schook guidance counselor where they think your student falls in the class.
Do FCPS high schools maintain a report detailing grade distribution and GPA deciles? Is it possible for parents to request a copy of this report to determine their student's decile placement?
No and No.
They don’t rank for a reason, it’s to reduce pressure on students over trivial differences in GPA that causes ranking changes.
I went to a high pressure famous public HS in NYC that ranked and kids LOST THEIR SHIT over getting a 96 instead of a 98 on a test because that 0.001 difference in their four year average so they dropped from #16 to #22 (out of 800) and they were convinced Princeton was now forevermore denied to them. People would argue with teachers after every test over 1 or 2 points when they already had 95+ scores on everything.
It’s absolutely poisonous and I will never ever ever support class ranking.
Colleges can easily put all applicants from a given high school in order by GPA. They can situate that data within the data from the last decade. They can even automate the process. The college knows your class rank percentile. It’s just the kids and families who are in the dark.
I get why high schools need to shield their teachers from the monstrous behavior you describe. But don’t kid yourself. Every school that gives grades is effectively ranking the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges calculate class rank based on info from the high school profile, their knowledge of the high school,amd a student’s trmscript as few schools provide class rank these days . You can ask your high schook guidance counselor where they think your student falls in the class.
Do FCPS high schools maintain a report detailing grade distribution and GPA deciles? Is it possible for parents to request a copy of this report to determine their student's decile placement?
No and No.
They don’t rank for a reason, it’s to reduce pressure on students over trivial differences in GPA that causes ranking changes.
I went to a high pressure famous public HS in NYC that ranked and kids LOST THEIR SHIT over getting a 96 instead of a 98 on a test because that 0.001 difference in their four year average so they dropped from #16 to #22 (out of 800) and they were convinced Princeton was now forevermore denied to them. People would argue with teachers after every test over 1 or 2 points when they already had 95+ scores on everything.
It’s absolutely poisonous and I will never ever ever support class ranking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges calculate class rank based on info from the high school profile, their knowledge of the high school,amd a student’s trmscript as few schools provide class rank these days . You can ask your high schook guidance counselor where they think your student falls in the class.
Do FCPS high schools maintain a report detailing grade distribution and GPA deciles? Is it possible for parents to request a copy of this report to determine their student's decile placement?
No and No.
They don’t rank for a reason, it’s to reduce pressure on students over trivial differences in GPA that causes ranking changes.
I went to a high pressure famous public HS in NYC that ranked and kids LOST THEIR SHIT over getting a 96 instead of a 98 on a test because that 0.001 difference in their four year average so they dropped from #16 to #22 (out of 800) and they were convinced Princeton was now forevermore denied to them. People would argue with teachers after every test over 1 or 2 points when they already had 95+ scores on everything.
It’s absolutely poisonous and I will never ever ever support class ranking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges calculate class rank based on info from the high school profile, their knowledge of the high school,amd a student’s trmscript as few schools provide class rank these days . You can ask your high schook guidance counselor where they think your student falls in the class.
Do FCPS high schools maintain a report detailing grade distribution and GPA deciles? Is it possible for parents to request a copy of this report to determine their student's decile placement?
Anonymous wrote:Most colleges calculate class rank based on info from the high school profile, their knowledge of the high school,amd a student’s trmscript as few schools provide class rank these days . You can ask your high schook guidance counselor where they think your student falls in the class.