Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if a student has 63.03 F In Biology will the grade change to D since is only half a point away from D?
Grading rule depends on the teacher and the school. Have the student ask if failed and missing work can be resubmitted to increase the grade.
HS teacher
Thanks,
Trying to get him to study and get help serve ADHD and in team taught classes, so it’s not the easiest
Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
Anonymous wrote:It is so hard to fail with the 50 percent floor. If you have less than 64 with that you deserve to fail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes more work for teachers to fail students than give them D’s. They often have to verify what type of help they gave, how many student and parent contacts, opportunities for retakes, etc. You kid most likely is going to get a D.
I would do this for the end of the year for this very reason, not for quarter report cards. Those aren’t rounded. But yes, my final year grade would round to a D because it’s too much work to give an D if it’s this close.
Anonymous wrote:It takes more work for teachers to fail students than give them D’s. They often have to verify what type of help they gave, how many student and parent contacts, opportunities for retakes, etc. You kid most likely is going to get a D.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
If my kid got the answer correctly as written, I would have challenged the grade instead of accepting the test getting thrown out.
A question was thrown out, not the entire test. Ultimately, we don’t let parents make those decisions.
Maybe but grading is not by any fixed rule. Some teachers are willing to help students with some extra work credit or resubmits and other teachers not so much.
HS Teacher.
I think maybe extra credit is fine when it's offered to all students equally. Sounds like the student asked for a bump because they took it upon themselves to find an error with the sole purpose of boosting their overall grade. If had been a solid B, would the student have still combed over the test? I would be annoyed by a student asking that.
Isn't reviewing your wrong test answers what teachers want every student to do?
Seems strange that you are offended by a student taking the initiative to be a self driven good student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
If my kid got the answer correctly as written, I would have challenged the grade instead of accepting the test getting thrown out.
A question was thrown out, not the entire test. Ultimately, we don’t let parents make those decisions.
Maybe but grading is not by any fixed rule. Some teachers are willing to help students with some extra work credit or resubmits and other teachers not so much.
HS Teacher.
I think maybe extra credit is fine when it's offered to all students equally. Sounds like the student asked for a bump because they took it upon themselves to find an error with the sole purpose of boosting their overall grade. If had been a solid B, would the student have still combed over the test? I would be annoyed by a student asking that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
If my kid got the answer correctly as written, I would have challenged the grade instead of accepting the test getting thrown out.
A question was thrown out, not the entire test. Ultimately, we don’t let parents make those decisions.
Maybe but grading is not by any fixed rule. Some teachers are willing to help students with some extra work credit or resubmits and other teachers not so much.
HS Teacher.
I think maybe extra credit is fine when it's offered to all students equally. Sounds like the student asked for a bump because they took it upon themselves to find an error with the sole purpose of boosting their overall grade. If had been a solid B, would the student have still combed over the test? I would be annoyed by a student asking that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if a student has 63.03 F In Biology will the grade change to D since is only half a point away from D?
Grading rule depends on the teacher and the school. Have the student ask if failed and missing work can be resubmitted to increase the grade.
HS teacher
Thanks,
Trying to get him to study and get help serve ADHD and in team taught classes, so it’s not the easiest
I would round up if I thought the student had turned in *some* quality work, and had been polite and respectful to me and his peers in the classrroom. Some teachers are sticklers though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if a student has 63.03 F In Biology will the grade change to D since is only half a point away from D?
Grading rule depends on the teacher and the school. Have the student ask if failed and missing work can be resubmitted to increase the grade.
HS teacher
Thanks,
Trying to get him to study and get help serve ADHD and in team taught classes, so it’s not the easiest
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
If my kid got the answer correctly as written, I would have challenged the grade instead of accepting the test getting thrown out.
A question was thrown out, not the entire test. Ultimately, we don’t let parents make those decisions.
Maybe but grading is not by any fixed rule. Some teachers are willing to help students with some extra work credit or resubmits and other teachers not so much.
HS Teacher.
I think maybe extra credit is fine when it's offered to all students equally. Sounds like the student asked for a bump because they took it upon themselves to find an error with the sole purpose of boosting their overall grade. If had been a solid B, would the student have still combed over the test? I would be annoyed by a student asking that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
If my kid got the answer correctly as written, I would have challenged the grade instead of accepting the test getting thrown out.
A question was thrown out, not the entire test. Ultimately, we don’t let parents make those decisions.
Maybe but grading is not by any fixed rule. Some teachers are willing to help students with some extra work credit or resubmits and other teachers not so much.
HS Teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
Related to this subject of rounding, my kid was less than 0.5 from an A in a class. They had turned in all their homework and participated in class.
After the final, my kid was still around a tenth from an A.
They looked over the test after the final and found an error on one of the questions the teacher had written. They were the only kid in the class who reviewed the final after it was graded.
They shared the error with the teacher who corrected the mistake by throwing out the incorrect question for all of the students.
My kid asked if they could get that last 10th of a point as extra credit for taking the time to actually read over the test and find that mistake.
The teacher said no.
Long story short, if the teachers won't round up by a tenth of a point for a kid who turned in all the work all year and took the time to review the final, then I doubt they will round up for a D student.
Your best option is probably to make your kid sit at the kitchen atble each night between now and the end of the year to do his homework with you looking over his shoulder to make sure he is not on tiktok or youtube. Double check his work daily. Make him study bio every night. It is almost all rote memorization so studying will help. Make sure he actually does all the homework and most importantly, submit it.
That will have better odds of raising a D minus to a regular D or maybe D plus.
If my kid got the answer correctly as written, I would have challenged the grade instead of accepting the test getting thrown out.
A question was thrown out, not the entire test. Ultimately, we don’t let parents make those decisions.