Anonymous wrote:No such thing as rounding up with a .4, that is. That rounds down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good for her. She’s got to learn to advocate for herself. This is how the world works.
This is why I am proud of her.
Anonymous wrote:I’d be proud of her too OP! Don’t get all the bitter responses here - this is very much how the world works.
Anonymous wrote:I’d be proud of her too OP! Don’t get all the bitter responses here - this is very much how the world works.
Anonymous wrote:Only a B? What happened?
Anonymous wrote:This is why everyone hates teachers these days. So ridiculous the comments in here.
OP - good for your girl. You don't know unless you try. College professors do this all the time. Tell her to keep asking. I went to MIT undergrad and Georgetown Law and got many a bump in my day just by asking. Usually, professors were willing to do this because they saw how hard I worked in their classes and they were not so pompous to think their weighing of grades or even calculation was perfect. Even the MIT professors and that's saying a lot because they're usually full of themselves. Your girl will go far in life asking for what she wants. No one ever died by hearing a "no."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so strange. Your daughter asked for a grade based on no work and you’re proud? My son was .1 away from the next grade a couple of years ago and didn’t even think to ask for free points.
Also provides more evidence that GPAs should not be valued as much as they are in admissions. Standardized tests are much more fair than this sort of teacher and student dependent grading.
Why not? "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" One of her teacher's taught her to asked it doesn't hurt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so strange. Your daughter asked for a grade based on no work and you’re proud? My son was .1 away from the next grade a couple of years ago and didn’t even think to ask for free points.
Also provides more evidence that GPAs should not be valued as much as they are in admissions. Standardized tests are much more fair than this sort of teacher and student dependent grading.
Why not? "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" One of her teacher's taught her to asked it doesn't hurt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good for her. She’s got to learn to advocate for herself. This is how the world works.
This is why I am proud of her.