Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a requirement to offer one per marking period. However, even as a fellow teacher, I was unable to get one particular English teacher to comply. I documented her refusal. Sent it to the department head and grade level administrator. Nothing ever happened.
Maybe focus your efforts on getting your kid to study the first time. No wonder there’s a teacher shortage.
Again, I myself is a teacher. Providing one retakable assessment a marking period —as required by MCPS— is not causing anyone to exit teaching who shouldn’t leave anyway. In my child’s case, she was a straight A student overall. It was excessively stressful to have a teacher refuse any makeups all year. The result was a ninth grader petrified to miss even a few days of instruction for death of her grandfather and Lyme disease.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grading becomes completely unmanageable for core classes if you allow retakes
We’re talking about teachers who do not allow even one retake.
—MCPS teacher who allows 2-3 a marking period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a requirement anywhere in MCPS or elsewhere. It might be a teacher's own policy to allow a make up in "exceptional circumstances".
This is false.
The Grading and reporting updates Google Doc shared with all secondary teachers explicitly states “Students should have multiple opportunities for reassessment each marking period.”
That is generic. Could be referring to homework.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not. Especially in high school. Study and ask for help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a requirement to offer one per marking period. However, even as a fellow teacher, I was unable to get one particular English teacher to comply. I documented her refusal. Sent it to the department head and grade level administrator. Nothing ever happened.
Maybe focus your efforts on getting your kid to study the first time. No wonder there’s a teacher shortage.
Again, I myself is a teacher. Providing one retakable assessment a marking period —as required by MCPS— is not causing anyone to exit teaching who shouldn’t leave anyway. In my child’s case, she was a straight A student overall. It was excessively stressful to have a teacher refuse any makeups all year. The result was a ninth grader petrified to miss even a few days of instruction for death of her grandfather and Lyme disease.
Why? Sounds like she needs therapy and meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grading becomes completely unmanageable for core classes if you allow retakes
We’re talking about teachers who do not allow even one retake.
—MCPS teacher who allows 2-3 a marking period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a requirement to offer one per marking period. However, even as a fellow teacher, I was unable to get one particular English teacher to comply. I documented her refusal. Sent it to the department head and grade level administrator. Nothing ever happened.
Maybe focus your efforts on getting your kid to study the first time. No wonder there’s a teacher shortage.
Again, I myself is a teacher. Providing one retakable assessment a marking period —as required by MCPS— is not causing anyone to exit teaching who shouldn’t leave anyway. In my child’s case, she was a straight A student overall. It was excessively stressful to have a teacher refuse any makeups all year. The result was a ninth grader petrified to miss even a few days of instruction for death of her grandfather and Lyme disease.
Why? Sounds like she needs therapy and meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a requirement anywhere in MCPS or elsewhere. It might be a teacher's own policy to allow a make up in "exceptional circumstances".
This is false.
The Grading and reporting updates Google Doc shared with all secondary teachers explicitly states “Students should have multiple opportunities for reassessment each marking period.”
That is generic. Could be referring to homework.
Homework isn’t an assessment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a requirement to offer one per marking period. However, even as a fellow teacher, I was unable to get one particular English teacher to comply. I documented her refusal. Sent it to the department head and grade level administrator. Nothing ever happened.
Maybe focus your efforts on getting your kid to study the first time. No wonder there’s a teacher shortage.
Again, I myself is a teacher. Providing one retakable assessment a marking period —as required by MCPS— is not causing anyone to exit teaching who shouldn’t leave anyway. In my child’s case, she was a straight A student overall. It was excessively stressful to have a teacher refuse any makeups all year. The result was a ninth grader petrified to miss even a few days of instruction for death of her grandfather and Lyme disease.
Anonymous wrote:For most classes, my children have been allowed retakes on quizzes and tests, but not on assessments
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a requirement anywhere in MCPS or elsewhere. It might be a teacher's own policy to allow a make up in "exceptional circumstances".
This is false.
The Grading and reporting updates Google Doc shared with all secondary teachers explicitly states “Students should have multiple opportunities for reassessment each marking period.”
That is generic. Could be referring to homework.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a requirement anywhere in MCPS or elsewhere. It might be a teacher's own policy to allow a make up in "exceptional circumstances".
This is false.
The Grading and reporting updates Google Doc shared with all secondary teachers explicitly states “Students should have multiple opportunities for reassessment each marking period.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a requirement to offer one per marking period. However, even as a fellow teacher, I was unable to get one particular English teacher to comply. I documented her refusal. Sent it to the department head and grade level administrator. Nothing ever happened.
Maybe focus your efforts on getting your kid to study the first time. No wonder there’s a teacher shortage.