Anonymous wrote:Remember:
C’s earn degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh what did we do back when you had to rely on your fortitude to comfort you that a decent grade will follow. Now a days you have students and parents that want to waste teacher time btching about every minute grade that comes out as they too know that college will bankrupt American families. American Education. It's almost an oxymoron.
DP and a teacher. I just read this thread with a heavy heart. This type of parent interaction is the worst part of the job, and it’s why I’ll probably leave one day.
One PP suggests flattery, because points are clearly more important than learning. Sure, manipulation is a life skill, but it isn’t what the child was supposed to learn in that situation.
One PP (presumably the OP?) is frustrated that her child followed a rubric and got an 86. Totally reasonable. Most rubrics have a column for exceptional achievement, and then a second for proficient work. Following a rubric proficiently will land you a reasonable 86.
I deal with this often at work, and when I put in grades lower than an A I just wait for the parent emails to hit my inbox. It never takes long. (The record is about 2 minutes.)
Some parents don’t want 86s. Or, frankly, for their students to be challenged. They simply want easy access to high grades. Learning? Achievement? That’s secondary.
Anonymous wrote:Oh what did we do back when you had to rely on your fortitude to comfort you that a decent grade will follow. Now a days you have students and parents that want to waste teacher time btching about every minute grade that comes out as they too know that college will bankrupt American families. American Education. It's almost an oxymoron.
Anonymous wrote:I get that. But as I mentioned he’s a tough grader in a very tough class. The way he grades is causing stress - it’s disingenuous to say grades don’t matter.
If a teacher truly wanted to have kids focus on learning instead of grades - then don’t have grades. Pass/Fail would work.
Conferences are coming up soon. And I’m thinking about discussing this with him in a way that’s non-confrontational. But I think figuring out the motivation behind this philosophy would help my kid who is a junior and, yeah, focused on his gpa this year.
Any ideas for how to do this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP can you give us the TL;DR version of your question for us?
This is the best I can do:
How should I gently suggest to the teacher in upcoming PTC that being a harsh grader - while at the same time telling students they should be there because they love Japanese and not because they want a good grade - is causing more harm to my kid than helping?
Why is caring about grades an inherently bad thing?
How can my kid demonstrate that he's doing what the teacher asked when he follows the rubric for a graded essay but still makes an 86?
OK, this is problematic. The truth is, he may just be a bad teacher. You can complain diplomatically, by all means, but if he's not the brightest bulb, he's never going to get it. I think what might be more helpful is for your kid to request a meeting with him to go over why he thought he checked all the stuff from the rubric, but still lost points. Your kid will need to pay close attention to the teacher's explanation, because the tone will tell him just as much as the words. If the teacher is amenable to flattery, and your kid has savvy social skills, he might be able to get some points back (life lesson!).
Kids can tell when teachers are in the wrong and just don't want to admit it. My daughter witnessed her Spanish teacher unfairly take off points from a classmate because she "seemed anxious when presenting". My daughter could hear every word she said and it was all correct according to the rubric, so her classmate should have gotten all the points, like my daughter did.
You can also request a meeting with the counselor, and ask whether this teacher has had complaints before. Ask other parents too.
Most teachers are honest and willing to discuss material with students, but there will be a few who just aren't. It sucks when you land on one. My oldest, in college now, had a terrible math teacher in senior year, who created a ton of unnecessary stress right during college applications. My daughter hasn't had such a terrible experience (she's in 9th grade), but we told her it might still happen.
All this is a life lesson in the things you can control vs the things you cannot control. Tell your kid to hang in there, and if you suspect he's a little weak in the actual language skills, get him a tutor.
Anonymous wrote:They're making the point that love of learning should be the driving force in school, even if unfortunately kids are well aware that's not what's rewarded in college admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP can you give us the TL;DR version of your question for us?
This is the best I can do:
How should I gently suggest to the teacher in upcoming PTC that being a harsh grader - while at the same time telling students they should be there because they love Japanese and not because they want a good grade - is causing more harm to my kid than helping?
Why is caring about grades an inherently bad thing?
How can my kid demonstrate that he's doing what the teacher asked when he follows the rubric for a graded essay but still makes an 86?