Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In MCPS during covid, you automatically earned one grade higher than your grade pre-covid. So if you got a B previously you earned an A. This led to inflated GPAs.
Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your dd’s b+ in Ap bio equates to a 4.3 on a weighted basis.
And that is why Dean J says they do not go by gpa. The above would be a 3.366 at DC school (yes AP B+).
Anonymous wrote:If more than half the kids in a class get an A, there is grade inflation. And yes, I understand that there is grade inflation everywhere. Everyone gets a trophy.
Anonymous wrote:Your dd’s b+ in Ap bio equates to a 4.3 on a weighted basis.
Anonymous wrote:In MCPS during covid, you automatically earned one grade higher than your grade pre-covid. So if you got a B previously you earned an A. This led to inflated GPAs.
Anonymous wrote:Why would a school take the higher grade as the overall grade? Which school system does that? (Our FCPS school does not do that. Student 2 would have a B in the class.)
MCPS. They also have retests and are not allowed to give final exams, so there is no exam grade to factor in.
Why would a school take the higher grade as the overall grade? Which school system does that? (Our FCPS school does not do that. Student 2 would have a B in the class.)
Really, it does not.
Anonymous wrote:Here is what we saw in HS. Example below for illustrative purposes for 1 course and 2 students.
Student 1 who is very bright and excels in the course:
MP 1 99% = A
MP 2 98.2% = A
Semester 1 grade which appears on the transcript = A
MP3 98.9% = A
MP 4 99.1% = A
Semester 2 grade which appears on the transcript = A
Now, let's review a 2nd student, who is in the same exact class, yet this person is not exceling in the course and so their parents intervene with help, paid tutoring, and extra work...to get their college bound student into the B+ and even A- range.
MP 1 84.5% = B
MP 2 90.1% = A
Take the higher of the two marking period grades and award an A for Semester 1 on the transcript
MP 3 91.2% = A
MP 4 83% = B
Take the higher of the two marking period grades and award an A for Semester 2.
So, we have 2 students applying to the same college. They look very similar, with Semester grades of As for the course.
Yet, in reality, one is a very high earning A student and the second is a solid B student, with a sprinkle of A-.
And, if these is an Honors Course, it's scored the same as an AP grade! Think about the difference between the AP student who got all A's and student#2. Now multiply this calc. over years and years of courses. Your strong, even low, B student just has to break the 90% threshold for 2 marking periods a year to capture the A.
In my opinion, this is grade inflation.
Anonymous wrote:Here is what we saw in HS. Example below for illustrative purposes for 1 course and 2 students.
Student 1 who is very bright and excels in the course:
MP 1 99% = A
MP 2 98.2% = A
Semester 1 grade which appears on the transcript = A
MP3 98.9% = A
MP 4 99.1% = A
Semester 2 grade which appears on the transcript = A
Now, let's review a 2nd student, who is in the same exact class, yet this person is not exceling in the course and so their parents intervene with help, paid tutoring, and extra work...to get their college bound student into the B+ and even A- range.
MP 1 84.5% = B
MP 2 90.1% = A
Take the higher of the two marking period grades and award an A for Semester 1 on the transcript
MP 3 91.2% = A
MP 4 83% = B
Take the higher of the two marking period grades and award an A for Semester 2.
So, we have 2 students applying to the same college. They look very similar, with Semester grades of As for the course.
Yet, in reality, one is a very high earning A student and the second is a solid B student, with a sprinkle of A-.
And, if these is an Honors Course, it's scored the same as an AP grade! Think about the difference between the AP student who got all A's and student#2. Now multiply this calc. over years and years of courses. Your strong, even low, B student just has to break the 90% threshold for 2 marking periods a year to capture the A.
In my opinion, this is grade inflation.