Anonymous wrote:Which Catholic schools? Parochial or private?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I went to Catholic school in the 70s, one could not earn higher than a 99, because "only God is perfect".
Haha!! I had forgotten that but yes, we were told the same thing in NY Catholic school in the 70s.
That is awesome! Too many kids today expect perfection from themselves and could use that lesson.
Anonymous wrote:They are trying to prove they are "more academic".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I went to Catholic school in the 70s, one could not earn higher than a 99, because "only God is perfect".
Haha!! I had forgotten that but yes, we were told the same thing in NY Catholic school in the 70s.
That is awesome! Too many kids today expect perfection from themselves and could use that lesson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I went to Catholic school in the 70s, one could not earn higher than a 99, because "only God is perfect".
Haha!! I had forgotten that but yes, we were told the same thing in NY Catholic school in the 70s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tougher grading scale. It is not a bad thing.
It’s not tougher if the material is easier.
In our experience, the material isn’t easier. We pulled our kids out of our local Fairfax County elementary and moved them to parochial.
Anonymous wrote:When I went to Catholic school in the 70s, one could not earn higher than a 99, because "only God is perfect".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your question is "why does my child's school" use this scale, and the person to ask is someone at your child's school. This isn't a universal "Catholic school" thing.
I do know that the Archdiocese of Washington uses that scale in all of its elementary schools. 93+ is an A, 85-92 is a B
Nobody cares about elementary school grades.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen public schools that use this scale. I don’t think it is just a Catholic school thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your question is "why does my child's school" use this scale, and the person to ask is someone at your child's school. This isn't a universal "Catholic school" thing.
I do know that the Archdiocese of Washington uses that scale in all of its elementary schools. 93+ is an A, 85-92 is a B