Anonymous wrote:FCPS has a hybrid policy. If kids do not turn in the assignment, it is a 0. If they turn in something, even if it is incorrect, they get a 50%. The idea is that it gives a kid some room to recover their grade.
My teacher friends tell me that most of those 0s stay 0s, kids are not turning in something to get the 50%. It is possible that some schools are keeping the 50% for all kids but I am hearing less of that happening.
The 50% came out of COVID and is slowly rolling back.
Anonymous wrote:
This is not true. FCPS' floor is 50% for everything. I am not allowed to put a 0 in my gradebook. I can put in an "NTI" (not turned in), but it is still a 50.
This must be your school then. It is not a blanket FCPS policy. Where I teach (an FCPS high school), if a student doesn't turn in work, it gets an NTI but that grade is a 0. At the end of the quarter, if the quarter grade is less than 50%, I have to raise it to 50% but that is not very common (maybe 1 kid a quarter).
Anonymous wrote:FCPS has a hybrid policy. If kids do not turn in the assignment, it is a 0. If they turn in something, even if it is incorrect, they get a 50%. The idea is that it gives a kid some room to recover their grade.
My teacher friends tell me that most of those 0s stay 0s, kids are not turning in something to get the 50%. It is possible that some schools are keeping the 50% for all kids but I am hearing less of that happening.
The 50% came out of COVID and is slowly rolling back.
Anonymous wrote:Catholic schools typically don't have lower grade thresholds. Ask me how I know! My DS had a 28% in algebra in 9th grade. He only passed with a 72% but that was after months of hard work and going to get extra math help during his free periods. No retakes either.
Anonymous wrote:Hello
I am interested in high schools in the DMV that can give grades lower than 50% when they are deserved.
Does every public school have this minimum grade policy?
Are there private schools that also have this minimum grade policy? Or maybe it's not explicitly written down, but teachers are expected to pass everyone?
I'm sure there are people out there who like the 50% minimum policy and I think you should go with what works for you, no judgment.
But where can a high-school aged child go if the family wants traditional grading for accuracy?
Thank you, and my apologies if this is already covered by another thread.