Anonymous wrote:So, if you get a B, B, B+, A ... you end up with an A- for the class. That is just wild to me.
Anonymous wrote:So what's the weighting?
A=4
A- = 3.7?
B+ = 3.3?
B =3?
B- =2.7?
C+ =2.3?
etc
Anonymous wrote:So what's the weighting?
A=4
A- = 3.7?
B+ = 3.3?
B =3?
B- =2.7?
C+ =2.3?
etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Is that correct that everything is rounded up regardless of how close to the lower grade? The DCPS grading policy online does not seem to discuss rounding.
Yes. It’s not really policy so much as what Aspen is programmed to do.
Why is it programmed that way? Because of policy.
Eh I’ve been in the system a long time. I’ve never gotten the impression that DCPS cares about GPAs or how a kid earns an A. They care about kids graduating and not failing. Beyond that I don’t think they thought much about this “policy”. Probably just default when they switched to automated final grade calculation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Is that correct that everything is rounded up regardless of how close to the lower grade? The DCPS grading policy online does not seem to discuss rounding.
Yes. It’s not really policy so much as what Aspen is programmed to do.
Why is it programmed that way? Because of policy.
Anonymous wrote:How does anyone not get an A in all classes DCPS with this completely insane grade inflation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Is that correct that everything is rounded up regardless of how close to the lower grade? The DCPS grading policy online does not seem to discuss rounding.
Yes. It’s not really policy so much as what Aspen is programmed to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Is that correct that everything is rounded up regardless of how close to the lower grade? The DCPS grading policy online does not seem to discuss rounding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Is that correct that everything is rounded up regardless of how close to the lower grade? The DCPS grading policy online does not seem to discuss rounding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Wait, what? 3.325 is an A- ?
Yup. That is why grades are so high. And honestly why they mean nothing. A kid with the following grades also gets an A-
A-, A-, A-, B+
Doesn’t seem to push kids to try very hard.
This really depends on the teacher. If the teacher never gives a grade above B, no math will get the year-end grade to an A-.
What teacher never gives a grade above a B? Seems difficult to achieve with retakes, late work policy, floor of 50%, lowest grade on submitted work 63%, etc. Your example is exceedingly rare.
I’m talking about grades on individual assignments. Nothing stops a teacher from giving Bs on everything. The retake policy doesn’t stop that; you can’t retake a B. The 50% floor doesn’t stop that; 50% isn’t higher than a B. The 63% policy doesn’t stop that; 63% isn’t higher than a B. Where is the DCPS policy that forces a teacher to say an assignment is an A? There isn’t one.
Now maybe teachers give out a lot of As, but that’s their choice. Nothing in the DCPS grading policy forces teachers to give everyone (or anyone) an A.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Wait, what? 3.325 is an A- ?
Yup. That is why grades are so high. And honestly why they mean nothing. A kid with the following grades also gets an A-
A-, A-, A-, B+
Doesn’t seem to push kids to try very hard.
This really depends on the teacher. If the teacher never gives a grade above B, no math will get the year-end grade to an A-.
What teacher never gives a grade above a B? Seems difficult to achieve with retakes, late work policy, floor of 50%, lowest grade on submitted work 63%, etc. Your example is exceedingly rare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t feed in/average as a GPA but as a numerical percentage. An A (93 and above for the quarter/term) is a 100. (I know this sounds insane but it is true). A B+ is an 89. Most other grades calculate at the highest possible percentage for that grade.
So do the math - your kid can prob get a B-and still end up with an A because those 100s make a huge difference.
This is false. It averages quality points and always rounds up. Your information hasn’t been accurate for quite some time in DCPS.
Ex:
A, B, B, B+
4.0 +3+3+3.3 =13.3
13.3/4=3.325. And that is an A-. This is where the true grade inflation exists.
Wait, what? 3.325 is an A- ?
Yup. That is why grades are so high. And honestly why they mean nothing. A kid with the following grades also gets an A-
A-, A-, A-, B+
Doesn’t seem to push kids to try very hard.
This really depends on the teacher. If the teacher never gives a grade above B, no math will get the year-end grade to an A-.