Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
A score is a score and should not be lowered so a school can say they don't give A pluses. If this is true, then his may not be a good school fit for us after all.
Please tell me which schools you are considering that give A+. I do not know of one.
I don't understand what you mean. Isn't a 98 and above average an A+? What do you mean you don't know of any schools that give A+ grades? I know students at all of these schools that receive 98 and above grades and therefore A+ grades. Are you saying you do not?
I will add that maybe I just know the small minority that really excel in their studies. Are you saying that if your child has a 98, 99, or 100 average in a class, you would not want them to receive the proper credit? I am confused in what you are saying. If a kid really excels in a class such as math or science and their grades reflect that - then they should receive the proper grade. A 99 average is an A+ and is not an A or A minus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
A lot of top schools do not give A plus, including Sidwell, MCPS, etc. I think the question should be why does STA has that policy?
Your thinking is off. If a child gets 98-100 percent of the answers on all tests, homework, and quizzes, which could easily be done in math, then that is an A+ average. What are you suggesting? That the school purposely hurt the child's score and lower it? That is absolutely ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
A score is a score and should not be lowered so a school can say they don't give A pluses. If this is true, then his may not be a good school fit for us after all.
Please tell me which schools you are considering that give A+. I do not know of one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
A score is a score and should not be lowered so a school can say they don't give A pluses. If this is true, then his may not be a good school fit for us after all.
Please tell me which schools you are considering that give A+. I do not know of one.
I don't understand what you mean. Isn't a 98 and above average an A+? What do you mean you don't know of any schools that give A+ grades? I know students at all of these schools that receive 98 and above grades and therefore A+ grades. Are you saying you do not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
A score is a score and should not be lowered so a school can say they don't give A pluses. If this is true, then his may not be a good school fit for us after all.
Please tell me which schools you are considering that give A+. I do not know of one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
A score is a score and should not be lowered so a school can say they don't give A pluses. If this is true, then his may not be a good school fit for us after all.
Anonymous wrote: The admissions officers at these colleges know the policies of the schools, especially the ones from which they get a lot of applications. There really isn't an impact to the students of these policies as long as they are known. I suppose it could be an issue at colleges that don't know NCS?
Anonymous wrote:I am confused by all this focus on A pluses. Is there any other school besides STA that gives them, public or private? (MCPS doesn't, FCPS doesn't, Sidwell doesn't, GDS doesn't, etc) Nobody is "lowering" a kid's grades by not including A pluses in their grading scales.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
It is a school policy, not up to the discretion of individual teachers. I don't know why -- maybe they figure the kids would compete too much to convert As to A pluses? It wouldn't be my policy but I don't know their past experiences. There's periodic talk of harmonizing the grading scales of NCS and STA because the students cross-register in many courses, but I guess both schools like their current approaches and they are still fully separate schools in terms of administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All she's saying is that NCS Bs didn't do anything for getting her daughter - who had scores above the Ivy averages - into a competitive school. Wait listed at South Carolina? She probably thought these Bs were valuable after freshman year and didn't realize how screwed her daughter was. I think she said it was her fault.
A kid, from any school, with 3.2 and high scores is not going to go to a top level college. NCS or any other school can not fix this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work hard, study and complete the material, A's are obtainable at NCS also (they don't give A+'s). That said, there are not many,if any, who graduate with a 4.0, because it is hard to be that dedicated to every subject, all the time. Same is true for any rigorous school. I have never heard stories of teachers refusing to give anyone in the class an A, but they do expect you to work for it.
They should give A+ grades - why not? STA does and they are equally rigorous.
A lot of top schools do not give A plus, including Sidwell, MCPS, etc. I think the question should be why does STA has that policy?