Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial studies show that the achievement gap is reduced which is quite remarkable, so less As and less Fs and more Bs, Cs, and Ds. Some school districts in fact no longer use grades at all and instead grade with language describing the level of mastery attained.
And how many kids were in these studies? Was there an objective way of evaluating the achievement gap other than the grade they received using skills-based grading? I know that my child tells me that class is less interesting and no one does the work anymore, specifically when it comes to something the kids were supposed to be prepared to discuss, but no one bothered since it doesn't count. Kids regularly show up to honors and AP classes and fail the quizzes because they don't count. Part of the problem with skills-based grading is that it teaches kids that they don't have to do the work.
I'd like to see SOL scores and compare that to before and after skills-based grading.
Like most equity efforts, this is just a method to dedicate more of the teachers time and grading leniency to failing students and leave self sufficient students to fend for themselves while also removing rewards for their self sufficiency. Equity is always about replacing poor parenting and ignoring everyone else.
I also feel this is all due to the great school ratings but maybe that’s off. If you have a special needs student or a low income student, why wouldn’t you care more about how that area of great schools ranks compared to the state and national average more than how it compares to other students in the school?
I think it's also a way for principals to close the achievement gap so that all students have equal outcomes. Easier to just get rid of Fs without actually having to do the work of teaching the kids making Fs. Have less kids making As to close the gap. A way to make administration look like they are doing an amazing job with equity.
Why are your kids NOT making A's on the assessments? Are you saying that is the teacher's fault?
As for kids not getting F's -- that happens when they actually show what they know on the assessments.
The assessments aren't "high stakes" -- kids get multiple chances to show what they know. In math, for instance, there are multiple practice assignments, and the a final skills assessement in Skill X. Then a later "cumulative assessment" covering skills X, Y, and Z. So, multiple opportunities to show and be graded on skill X (as well as skill Y, and skill Z). That benefits not just the poor kids/lower performers who might have gotten an F on Skill X in the past, but it should also benefit the quick-to-learn kids who show "mastery" the first time they are assessed on Skill X.
But the multiple practice assignments don’t count. I would say the majority of the kids don’t do the work when it doesn’t count. It’s really almost impossible to have a conversation to define SBG because it’s so confusing. Everyone on this thread has it a little wrong and a little right. Then every class is doing it differently. For some classes this does end up being high stakes. For ex. Math all the skills are getting replaced then for English, assessments aren’t getting replaced at all. Everything worked fine before SBG. This is just stupid.
What I want to know: what were the grades on quizzes before SBG and what are the grades now when they don’t count. Also what were the grades overall last year compared to the grades at the end of this year. And while we are at it, a student survey to determine if SBG has an impact on a student’s mental health.
Anonymous wrote:This is a sad situation, another historically good Fairfax County school being dragged down by educational experimentation. Apparently for the purpose of inflating the grades of those at the bottom by ignoring missed assignments, and suppressing the grades of those at the top that work hard. I suppose for the purpose of creating the appearance of a large mediocre middle, with no winners and no losers. But once real life hits, many will likely be losers, and consider their education from a supposedly “good school” in Fairfax County to be a complete failure.
High school is the time that students learn the work habits that are required to succeed in college, and life in general. Madison students will sadly forgo the important lesson that hard work/preparation leads to good grades, and individual success. Why study hard to master Newtonian mechanics in physics, when you can make it up later, hopefully, in electricity and magnetism to erase your poor effort in Newtonian mechanics. (These are two totally different topics covered in the 1st year Physics). Even if the student pulls this off, the chance to learn Newtonian mechanics (the basis for all mechanical engineering) in high school will be lost forever.
The workforce today is global. That means our students will have to compete with those from China, Japan, S.Korea, etc. for future jobs, even in US-based companies. And I can guarantee you they are not doing this nonsense in China, they would simply laugh in your face for even suggesting it.
Who is the bigger winner from all this ? Its Amazon (and the like), because they will have plenty of “drones” competing for their low-wage jobs due to their failed public education. But some of us had higher hopes for the future, and are paying ever increasing high property taxes to support, what is supposed to be, a “good” school district.
It’s just sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pick your battles. Some us us (and our kids) are doing fine with SBG. Not everyone thinks Madison has gone to hell in a handbasket. It's different. But not doomsday.
It sounds like you have a laid back kid who is happy getting by. I have one of those too. But my other kid that is especially driven is finding the grading process, particularly the lack of distinction between a b+ and a b- stressful and unfair. But it does remind me of the real world, where the less driven workers still end up getting paid (often) the same as the folks who go all out. So maybe this is a good lesson to learn early on, why put in a ton of effort for little gain.
No these kids happy to get by are going to end up at a fulfillment center at Amazon if they are lucky.
Why are your kids NOT making A's on the assessments? Are you saying that is the teacher's fault?
As for kids not getting F's -- that happens when they actually show what they know on the assessments.
Anonymous wrote:The difference I’m seeing from last year and this one is that previously students could earn a 10 or 20 percent grade bump from doing the homework- now, the homework, quizzes, and other assignments such as labs don’t count. Also there was the opportunity for retakes on tests/assessments. That is gone. So all the pressure is on the one assessment, which are somehow broken down into 5 grading skills. This is resulting in pressure to be perfect on that one day of testing. Overall it is more difficult to get an A than it was before. Madison thinks it is the leader and at the forefront of grading - but those on the outside don’t know how flawed the system is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grading at Madison is a disorganized mess this year and the principal knows that. Each teacher has their own version of skills based grading.
I’m not sure the principal does know it. Seems like Madison is doubling down on this next year. Is there any hope at all of stopping this? I plan to vote straight Republican for the next school board elections in the hopes that eventually they replace Gatehouse officials who ok’d this. But that is years away.
Anonymous wrote:My biggest issue is that some assignments are not for grading and others aren't and often it's too difficult to tell which ones are for grading and often the kids don't do the not for grading work and then bomb the for grading ones. They should be able to allow for some retakes a year to replace a couple of low grades as well as make certain assignments count but to a lesser degree. This was how it was when my child started this school. Other than the not for grading assignments, I don't understand skills-based grading and why it would be better or worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial studies show that the achievement gap is reduced which is quite remarkable, so less As and less Fs and more Bs, Cs, and Ds. Some school districts in fact no longer use grades at all and instead grade with language describing the level of mastery attained.
And how many kids were in these studies? Was there an objective way of evaluating the achievement gap other than the grade they received using skills-based grading? I know that my child tells me that class is less interesting and no one does the work anymore, specifically when it comes to something the kids were supposed to be prepared to discuss, but no one bothered since it doesn't count. Kids regularly show up to honors and AP classes and fail the quizzes because they don't count. Part of the problem with skills-based grading is that it teaches kids that they don't have to do the work.
I'd like to see SOL scores and compare that to before and after skills-based grading.
Like most equity efforts, this is just a method to dedicate more of the teachers time and grading leniency to failing students and leave self sufficient students to fend for themselves while also removing rewards for their self sufficiency. Equity is always about replacing poor parenting and ignoring everyone else.
I also feel this is all due to the great school ratings but maybe that’s off. If you have a special needs student or a low income student, why wouldn’t you care more about how that area of great schools ranks compared to the state and national average more than how it compares to other students in the school?
I think it's also a way for principals to close the achievement gap so that all students have equal outcomes. Easier to just get rid of Fs without actually having to do the work of teaching the kids making Fs. Have less kids making As to close the gap. A way to make administration look like they are doing an amazing job with equity.
Why are your kids NOT making A's on the assessments? Are you saying that is the teacher's fault?
As for kids not getting F's -- that happens when they actually show what they know on the assessments.
The assessments aren't "high stakes" -- kids get multiple chances to show what they know. In math, for instance, there are multiple practice assignments, and the a final skills assessement in Skill X. Then a later "cumulative assessment" covering skills X, Y, and Z. So, multiple opportunities to show and be graded on skill X (as well as skill Y, and skill Z). That benefits not just the poor kids/lower performers who might have gotten an F on Skill X in the past, but it should also benefit the quick-to-learn kids who show "mastery" the first time they are assessed on Skill X.
But the multiple practice assignments don’t count. I would say the majority of the kids don’t do the work when it doesn’t count. It’s really almost impossible to have a conversation to define SBG because it’s so confusing. Everyone on this thread has it a little wrong and a little right. Then every class is doing it differently. For some classes this does end up being high stakes. For ex. Math all the skills are getting replaced then for English, assessments aren’t getting replaced at all. Everything worked fine before SBG. This is just stupid.
What I want to know: what were the grades on quizzes before SBG and what are the grades now when they don’t count. Also what were the grades overall last year compared to the grades at the end of this year. And while we are at it, a student survey to determine if SBG has an impact on a student’s mental health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial studies show that the achievement gap is reduced which is quite remarkable, so less As and less Fs and more Bs, Cs, and Ds. Some school districts in fact no longer use grades at all and instead grade with language describing the level of mastery attained.
And how many kids were in these studies? Was there an objective way of evaluating the achievement gap other than the grade they received using skills-based grading? I know that my child tells me that class is less interesting and no one does the work anymore, specifically when it comes to something the kids were supposed to be prepared to discuss, but no one bothered since it doesn't count. Kids regularly show up to honors and AP classes and fail the quizzes because they don't count. Part of the problem with skills-based grading is that it teaches kids that they don't have to do the work.
I'd like to see SOL scores and compare that to before and after skills-based grading.
Like most equity efforts, this is just a method to dedicate more of the teachers time and grading leniency to failing students and leave self sufficient students to fend for themselves while also removing rewards for their self sufficiency. Equity is always about replacing poor parenting and ignoring everyone else.
I also feel this is all due to the great school ratings but maybe that’s off. If you have a special needs student or a low income student, why wouldn’t you care more about how that area of great schools ranks compared to the state and national average more than how it compares to other students in the school?
I think it's also a way for principals to close the achievement gap so that all students have equal outcomes. Easier to just get rid of Fs without actually having to do the work of teaching the kids making Fs. Have less kids making As to close the gap. A way to make administration look like they are doing an amazing job with equity.
Why are your kids NOT making A's on the assessments? Are you saying that is the teacher's fault?
As for kids not getting F's -- that happens when they actually show what they know on the assessments.
The assessments aren't "high stakes" -- kids get multiple chances to show what they know. In math, for instance, there are multiple practice assignments, and the a final skills assessement in Skill X. Then a later "cumulative assessment" covering skills X, Y, and Z. So, multiple opportunities to show and be graded on skill X (as well as skill Y, and skill Z). That benefits not just the poor kids/lower performers who might have gotten an F on Skill X in the past, but it should also benefit the quick-to-learn kids who show "mastery" the first time they are assessed on Skill X.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial studies show that the achievement gap is reduced which is quite remarkable, so less As and less Fs and more Bs, Cs, and Ds. Some school districts in fact no longer use grades at all and instead grade with language describing the level of mastery attained.
And how many kids were in these studies? Was there an objective way of evaluating the achievement gap other than the grade they received using skills-based grading? I know that my child tells me that class is less interesting and no one does the work anymore, specifically when it comes to something the kids were supposed to be prepared to discuss, but no one bothered since it doesn't count. Kids regularly show up to honors and AP classes and fail the quizzes because they don't count. Part of the problem with skills-based grading is that it teaches kids that they don't have to do the work.
I'd like to see SOL scores and compare that to before and after skills-based grading.
Like most equity efforts, this is just a method to dedicate more of the teachers time and grading leniency to failing students and leave self sufficient students to fend for themselves while also removing rewards for their self sufficiency. Equity is always about replacing poor parenting and ignoring everyone else.
I also feel this is all due to the great school ratings but maybe that’s off. If you have a special needs student or a low income student, why wouldn’t you care more about how that area of great schools ranks compared to the state and national average more than how it compares to other students in the school?
I think it's also a way for principals to close the achievement gap so that all students have equal outcomes. Easier to just get rid of Fs without actually having to do the work of teaching the kids making Fs. Have less kids making As to close the gap. A way to make administration look like they are doing an amazing job with equity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this being pushed at Madison of all places? Is the new principal a true believer in SBG or does she just think she’ll be rewarded if she helps “close a gap”?
I think it may have something to do with the way principals are assessed, but there is also a whole industry around this: conferences & training, opportunities for travel, that’s why I think there is an incentive for principals to constantly change things which ultimately takes away from a teacher’s ability to focus on teaching and providing feedback to students because they are always being asked to do more stuff. Teachers have no work/life balance because of this.