Anonymous wrote:OP here. What I got was a report card as it stands today. It is an F for the quarter? (If I interpret it right). Zero points for that assignment, and various points for the other assignments during this quarter.
I thought because the quarter has not ended so there is no final grade yet? But the F obvious did not considered all the other assignment.
I am not sure, and I don't know how DD can recover from that F even if she get A+ for the remainder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. What I got was a report card as it stands today. It is an F for the quarter? (If I interpret it right). Zero points for that assignment, and various points for the other assignments during this quarter.
I thought because the quarter has not ended so there is no final grade yet? But the F obvious did not considered all the other assignment.
I am not sure, and I don't know how DD can recover from that F even if she get A+ for the remainder.
I would immediately schedule a conference with the teacher. This is another issue - assigning a ZERO for work like this. It is defeating to a student who otherwise works hard to learn.
And, if the F was assigned because of primarily homework assignments, I would be angry.
The questions I would ask -
How is my child performing in the classroom? On tests? On quizzes?
How does my child participate?
Should a grade in this class reflect my child’s achievement - her understanding of skills and concepts taught and learned?
Is an F a true reflection of my child’s ACHIEVEMENT this quarter, of is it more a reflection of the punishment she received as a result of this homework assignment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. What I got was a report card as it stands today. It is an F for the quarter? (If I interpret it right). Zero points for that assignment, and various points for the other assignments during this quarter.
I thought because the quarter has not ended so there is no final grade yet? But the F obvious did not considered all the other assignment.
I am not sure, and I don't know how DD can recover from that F even if she get A+ for the remainder.
I would immediately schedule a conference with the teacher. This is another issue - assigning a ZERO for work like this. It is defeating to a student who otherwise works hard to learn.
And, if the F was assigned because of primarily homework assignments, I would be angry.
The questions I would ask -
How is my child performing in the classroom? On tests? On quizzes?
How does my child participate?
Should a grade in this class reflect my child’s achievement - her understanding of skills and concepts taught and learned?
Is an F a true reflection of my child’s ACHIEVEMENT this quarter, of is it more a reflection of the punishment she received as a result of this homework assignment?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. What I got was a report card as it stands today. It is an F for the quarter? (If I interpret it right). Zero points for that assignment, and various points for the other assignments during this quarter.
I thought because the quarter has not ended so there is no final grade yet? But the F obvious did not considered all the other assignment.
I am not sure, and I don't know how DD can recover from that F even if she get A+ for the remainder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is about HOMEWORK? My view is that the action the school took is over the top. It is one thing to cheat on a test by copying someone else’s work. But HOMEWORK? The purpose of homework is to gain practice in learning certain skills and concepts. If someone copied your daughter’s homework, the one that loses is the person who copied it.
And, as for the Madison HS honor code - maybe I missed it, but where does it address HOMEWORK?
I would begin by asking the school what the purpose of homework is. Is it graded? If it is, that is interesting because I would wonder how the school knows WHO completed the homework. If the parent helped the student, then who is really getting the grade - the parent or the student? How can the school know, for certain, if the student actually completed the homework independently, thus earning the grade he/she is given.
Yes, sometimes in MS and HS homework counts for a chunk of the grade. Think less nightly math homework, and more a math project. For example, in Algebra last year, my DC was given lists of equations that became lines, and then based on this underlying pattern, had to add more lines of his own, come up with the equations for those lines, and create a picture that he colored in. A great, creative way to learn this concept. They were given a couple weeks to do this-- at home, and it carried about as much weight as a unit test. If OP's child had completed the homework a week out, it sounds like it falls more into this long term project category and less into routine nightly homework, which is usually just checked for completion.
And no, the school probably had no way of know whether he did this himself (he did). The same way that they have no way of knowing whether he really practiced his instrument when I sign practice logs and he turns them in. Hence the honor code. But if I had done the work for him, then he wouldn't have learned the concept, and would have bombed the unit test. So in the end, there would still have been a consequence.
Anonymous wrote:I think an F for the assignment would be warranted, even though it was unintentional due to her age. An F for the semester is crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I think an F for the assignment would be warranted, even though it was unintentional due to her age. An F for the semester is crazy.