Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% rule and the way final grades are averaged definitely makes grade inflation real. Combine that with no real due dates for homework and retakes you are not looking at a lot of challenge or accountability. Not sure what your goal was in moving kid from private to public. If rigor was your goal, I'd move back. Otherwise, I'd probably relax. It sounds like your kid is finishing their work on time and is getting good grades. That could be really beneficial for self-esteem.
What schools are still giving 50 percent for no work? Not my kids school.
Most are.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS MS does not focus on academics. They focus more on social emotional learning. Academics is a joke, which sets them up for failure when they hit HS and start taking AP classes.
In hindsight, we should've put our DC in private school for MS; we had thought about that during covid, but we let it go.
When they hit HS and started taking AP classes, the lack of any academic rigor in MS became obvious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% rule and the way final grades are averaged definitely makes grade inflation real. Combine that with no real due dates for homework and retakes you are not looking at a lot of challenge or accountability. Not sure what your goal was in moving kid from private to public. If rigor was your goal, I'd move back. Otherwise, I'd probably relax. It sounds like your kid is finishing their work on time and is getting good grades. That could be really beneficial for self-esteem.
What schools are still giving 50 percent for no work? Not my kids school.
Most are.
Equity, amirite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% rule and the way final grades are averaged definitely makes grade inflation real. Combine that with no real due dates for homework and retakes you are not looking at a lot of challenge or accountability. Not sure what your goal was in moving kid from private to public. If rigor was your goal, I'd move back. Otherwise, I'd probably relax. It sounds like your kid is finishing their work on time and is getting good grades. That could be really beneficial for self-esteem.
What schools are still giving 50 percent for no work? Not my kids school.
Most are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% rule and the way final grades are averaged definitely makes grade inflation real. Combine that with no real due dates for homework and retakes you are not looking at a lot of challenge or accountability. Not sure what your goal was in moving kid from private to public. If rigor was your goal, I'd move back. Otherwise, I'd probably relax. It sounds like your kid is finishing their work on time and is getting good grades. That could be really beneficial for self-esteem.
What schools are still giving 50 percent for no work? Not my kids school.