Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For emerging skills it's strange that kids are being graded for skills they aren't supposed to have mastered yet. Under traditional grading students are only assessed based on what they're supposed to know at that point in the year--they test Q1 expectations in Q1. It's really strange to get a Q1 report card based on end of year expectations.
I think that's going to make lots of parents uncomfortable.
Last year's report cards only had specific sub-standards that were supposed to be covered that quarter. After that you didn't see that sub-standard again, even if the kid was marked as Developing. I do think it's an improvement from last year to show how the kid is progressing on the overall standards they are supposed to meet by the end of the year instead of very specific sub-standards. Would I prefer an ABC type grading scale? Maybe... but for elementary those are mostly vibes based anyway.
Anonymous wrote:For emerging skills it's strange that kids are being graded for skills they aren't supposed to have mastered yet. Under traditional grading students are only assessed based on what they're supposed to know at that point in the year--they test Q1 expectations in Q1. It's really strange to get a Q1 report card based on end of year expectations.
I think that's going to make lots of parents uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a new grading system at my kid's APS elementary school this year: the standards remain the same for the entire year (written at end of grade level standards), and it's possible to get a 4 for "extending" the standard. Last year, the standards changed each quarter, and grades topped out at 3.
For those of you with high-performing kids, what do you expect and what do you reward under this new system? My kid got some 2s and 3s, no 4s, for first quarter. What would be the equivalent of getting straight A's (which was my goal as a kid)?
My 2nd grader got mostly 2s in and few 3s. He is pretty advanced (99% percentile in national and county from all of the tests that provide such information throughout her 1st and 2nd grade up to so far), so not sure what to make of this report card.
Anonymous wrote:There's a new grading system at my kid's APS elementary school this year: the standards remain the same for the entire year (written at end of grade level standards), and it's possible to get a 4 for "extending" the standard. Last year, the standards changed each quarter, and grades topped out at 3.
For those of you with high-performing kids, what do you expect and what do you reward under this new system? My kid got some 2s and 3s, no 4s, for first quarter. What would be the equivalent of getting straight A's (which was my goal as a kid)?
Anonymous wrote:This is the most useless report card I have ever gotten. Did my child learn what they were supposed to this quarter? Guess I better ask the teacher because a bunch of 2s telling me she’s on track for the end of the year does absolutely nothing for me. What is going to happen to these children when they start receiving actual grades?
The soft bigotry of low expectations. Thanks APS 🙄
Anonymous wrote:There's a new grading system at my kid's APS elementary school this year: the standards remain the same for the entire year (written at end of grade level standards), and it's possible to get a 4 for "extending" the standard. Last year, the standards changed each quarter, and grades topped out at 3.
For those of you with high-performing kids, what do you expect and what do you reward under this new system? My kid got some 2s and 3s, no 4s, for first quarter. What would be the equivalent of getting straight A's (which was my goal as a kid)?
Anonymous wrote:As always, the useful information is in the comments and parent teacher conferences.
Anonymous wrote:I don't reward my kids for learning. We've had standards based grading since K. It's a joke.