Anonymous wrote:How in the world are teachers supposed to do all of that?
Anonymous wrote:If you turn it in past the deadline in college, you get an actual zero.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you turn it in past the deadline in college, you get an actual zero.
I had some professors who would accept late work for partial credit.
Only at crappy schools.
Only at schools that value education.
Elon Musk is en route to being a trillionaire and his work is always late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you turn it in past the deadline in college, you get an actual zero.
I had some professors who would accept late work for partial credit.
Only at crappy schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you turn it in past the deadline in college, you get an actual zero.
I had some professors who would accept late work for partial credit.
Anonymous wrote:If you turn it in past the deadline in college, you get an actual zero.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS can’t satisfy parents no matter what they do. First parents complain about grade inflation then they complain about strict grading policies. Why aren’t the students being held accountable for turning in late work, missing assignments, not reporting Chromebook issues in a timely manner? Its always easy to blame someone else than take responsibility for your own actions.
Anonymous wrote:If you turn it in past the deadline in college, you get an actual zero.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are teachers really told to do all that? My kid has an 89 in one class that would be a 90 or above (an A) except for 1 missing assignment early in the school year where they failed to upload an assignment due to a tech issue, and the teacher refused to accept it via hard copy the next day.
If this new policy is supposed to be enacted, the teacher didn’t follow the appropriate rules for communication, because I never saw a “z” and they never sent a message about this.
Another life lesson - don't wait until the deadline to turn in the assignment. Things like this happen. Your kid had time to turn in the assignment on time, then how many days after the due date to turn it, and didn't turn it in.
Uh, it sounds like you didn't read the PP very well. The student tried to turn it in the next day and the teacher wouldn't accept it.
Sounds like you don't understand what a deadline is. If the deadline on the 5th, turning it in on the 6th is after the deadline.
NP, in fairness, it is confusing that there are both due dates and deadlines and they’re not synonymous in MCPS.
PP, the due date is the date by which the assignment is supposed to be turned in, but MCPS allows teachers to set a deadline after the due date, which is the last day the teacher will accept that assignment and give any credit. To get full credit, you must submit work by the due date. To get partial credit, you must submit by the deadline.
Do teachers have the freedom to make the deadline the same date as the due date?
Never heard of this in the real world. A due date and a deadline have always been the same thing in all parts of my life! Why are school districts doing this? Turn the damn thing in or your will receive a consequence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are teachers really told to do all that? My kid has an 89 in one class that would be a 90 or above (an A) except for 1 missing assignment early in the school year where they failed to upload an assignment due to a tech issue, and the teacher refused to accept it via hard copy the next day.
If this new policy is supposed to be enacted, the teacher didn’t follow the appropriate rules for communication, because I never saw a “z” and they never sent a message about this.
Another life lesson - don't wait until the deadline to turn in the assignment. Things like this happen. Your kid had time to turn in the assignment on time, then how many days after the due date to turn it, and didn't turn it in.
Uh, it sounds like you didn't read the PP very well. The student tried to turn it in the next day and the teacher wouldn't accept it.
Sounds like you don't understand what a deadline is. If the deadline on the 5th, turning it in on the 6th is after the deadline.
NP, in fairness, it is confusing that there are both due dates and deadlines and they’re not synonymous in MCPS.
PP, the due date is the date by which the assignment is supposed to be turned in, but MCPS allows teachers to set a deadline after the due date, which is the last day the teacher will accept that assignment and give any credit. To get full credit, you must submit work by the due date. To get partial credit, you must submit by the deadline.
Do teachers have the freedom to make the deadline the same date as the due date?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are teachers really told to do all that? My kid has an 89 in one class that would be a 90 or above (an A) except for 1 missing assignment early in the school year where they failed to upload an assignment due to a tech issue, and the teacher refused to accept it via hard copy the next day.
If this new policy is supposed to be enacted, the teacher didn’t follow the appropriate rules for communication, because I never saw a “z” and they never sent a message about this.
Another life lesson - don't wait until the deadline to turn in the assignment. Things like this happen. Your kid had time to turn in the assignment on time, then how many days after the due date to turn it, and didn't turn it in.
Uh, it sounds like you didn't read the PP very well. The student tried to turn it in the next day and the teacher wouldn't accept it.
Sounds like you don't understand what a deadline is. If the deadline on the 5th, turning it in on the 6th is after the deadline.
NP, in fairness, it is confusing that there are both due dates and deadlines and they’re not synonymous in MCPS.
PP, the due date is the date by which the assignment is supposed to be turned in, but MCPS allows teachers to set a deadline after the due date, which is the last day the teacher will accept that assignment and give any credit. To get full credit, you must submit work by the due date. To get partial credit, you must submit by the deadline.
Do teachers have the freedom to make the deadline the same date as the due date?