Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh my kid is very stressed about this new policy. I don't think I realized how much he really cared about getting 100%s for everything š
Then itās good for him. Do you want him to go to college and get a 93% and freak out? Or worse, an actual B.
Of course not. I think it is just a bit of a wakeup call that we need to address his anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Itās worrisome for strong students. If everyone has an A in APS grades will quickly be meaningless. Having a 4.0 in APS will mean nothing at all. Ugh.
FCPS has a modification of the policy that aps adopted at the beginning of the school year and they do not seem to have issues getting people into colleges. FCPS schools are ranked in the highest in the state, many above aps schools.
At my kids FCPS, it is optional to allow retake but you canāt retake to more than an 80. I do think that student grades under the āretake to an Aā policy will be viewed suspiciously. If colleges know about it.
Of course colleges already know about it. And at my DSs FCPS high school each course can decide their own retake policy. So all FCPS schools have to allow a retake to an 80 and then each course can decide if they want to go above it or stay with the 80. All retakes have to be offered and completed in two weeks with some exceptions. Also in FCPS, any work that is a reasonable attempt cannot get a zero. You must receive above a 50%. Only work that is not handed in can receive a zero. So FCPS has a more lenient grading policy than aps and has had one for years. Those kids have not gotten lazy and no one in FCPS has accused kids of making a mockery of the system. They have passed tons of AP exams, been national merit semi finalists, won science, history, literary, annd quiz bowl awards, etc etc. I donāt think the previous aps retake policy was a travesty. Yes- there could have been data driven revisions this summer, but ending it mid year based on teacher comments is not necessarily a transparent decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh my kid is very stressed about this new policy. I don't think I realized how much he really cared about getting 100%s for everything š
Then itās good for him. Do you want him to go to college and get a 93% and freak out? Or worse, an actual B.
Anonymous wrote:Were there any grades that were brought from 0-49 up to a 50? Maybe the 59 was already a gift.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh my kid is very stressed about this new policy. I don't think I realized how much he really cared about getting 100%s for everything š
Anonymous wrote:Itās worrisome for strong students. If everyone has an A in APS grades will quickly be meaningless. Having a 4.0 in APS will mean nothing at all. Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Itās worrisome for strong students. If everyone has an A in APS grades will quickly be meaningless. Having a 4.0 in APS will mean nothing at all. Ugh.
FCPS has a modification of the policy that aps adopted at the beginning of the school year and they do not seem to have issues getting people into colleges. FCPS schools are ranked in the highest in the state, many above aps schools.
At my kids FCPS, it is optional to allow retake but you canāt retake to more than an 80. I do think that student grades under the āretake to an Aā policy will be viewed suspiciously. If colleges know about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My guess is that a lot of teachers were considering quitting mid-year. Everything they are being asked to do is just too much for them. Ten years ago quitting mid-year would have been incredibly bad form but now some teachers who stay actually applaud those who quit mid-year because it's so bad.
This. Anyone could see this was going to be bad idea when they drafted it last spring. But as usual, Syphax didn't listen. Now they have to change it mid-year because it's a ridiculous amount of work for teachers. The kids who want to retake are kids trying to raise from a B to an A. Teachers don't have time to help the kids who are below a B.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Itās worrisome for strong students. If everyone has an A in APS grades will quickly be meaningless. Having a 4.0 in APS will mean nothing at all. Ugh.
FCPS has a modification of the policy that aps adopted at the beginning of the school year and they do not seem to have issues getting people into colleges. FCPS schools are ranked in the highest in the state, many above aps schools.
Anonymous wrote:Itās worrisome for strong students. If everyone has an A in APS grades will quickly be meaningless. Having a 4.0 in APS will mean nothing at all. Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Itās worrisome for strong students. If everyone has an A in APS grades will quickly be meaningless. Having a 4.0 in APS will mean nothing at all. Ugh.