Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you meet the on-level standard in ES, you get an A. Kids who are not at grade level get a lower grade. At our school, not everyone gets an A in every class. I do think teachers spend most of their time trying to help kids who are below grade level meet the standard, but they don't succeed with everyone so there are kids who don't get all As.
A kid with 99% on MAP in math somehow got a B in 2nd-grade math. My sense is the teacher just hands out worksheets and doesn't want to be bothered with explaining anything.
Anonymous wrote:My son is a 4th grader in MCPS. He came from private school. He has all As and 2 Bs. I think the grading is way too easy and I hate how the report card has no details in narrative form. I’m assuming grading gets harder in middle school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the MCPS reg on grading: https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/ikara.pdf
In ES, an A indicates mastery of the grade-level standard.
And a B indicates that “the student frequently demonstrates mastery of the grade-level standards”. It doesn’t mean they’re below grade level. My kid has ADD and sometimes skips questions, makes careless mistakes, or doesn’t explain how he got his answers the way the curriculum wants him to. He’s in 3rd grade and makes As and Bs. 99th percentile on MAP tests. He’s going to 4/5 math next year.
Have you seen the Eureka math assessments? They’re dumb. Grades on those things aren’t a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:My son is a 4th grader in MCPS. He came from private school. He has all As and 2 Bs. I think the grading is way too easy and I hate how the report card has no details in narrative form. I’m assuming grading gets harder in middle school?
Anonymous wrote:When does kids get grade like A/B/C on report card from ES?
Anonymous wrote:This is the MCPS reg on grading: https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/ikara.pdf
In ES, an A indicates mastery of the grade-level standard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you meet the on-level standard in ES, you get an A. Kids who are not at grade level get a lower grade. At our school, not everyone gets an A in every class. I do think teachers spend most of their time trying to help kids who are below grade level meet the standard, but they don't succeed with everyone so there are kids who don't get all As.
This isn’t true at all. Plenty of kids who are on or even above grade level don’t get straight As.