Anonymous wrote:This is the new paradigm, set up a confusing grading system “designed” to help Johnny/Jane succeed, but really all it does it create a way to make everyone average.
Equity in action!
Anonymous wrote:There was a school board work session in the fall where the board was told that a group of school administrators is studying grading policy and will recommend changes later this year. It was so vague - why are they doing this? What is it based on? What is skills based and what is standards based? I am going to pay attention to see what the group recommends and hopefully they will share their research.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, this isn’t coming from the board. It’s coming from administrators. And I am not understanding that this is equity driven. It seems harder to get good grades.
Here’s the explanation: https://www.gse.harvard.edu/news/ed/19/05/grade-expectations
The idea is that grades should reflect what the kid knows at the end. That means, grades for quizzes, homework, class work, participation, etc. count for nothing. It also means for kids who are low A students down to about C+ students, their grades will often come down because there is no buffer to help boost their grade to the next level. Kids who are tippy top As, are fine, but that’s not the majority.
Of course, you also have teachers who have very hard grading policies, extremely hard tests, and are poor teachers. Add that to some schools/teachers applying this process and others aren’t, it’s a terrible policy. I know others will argue that in college there are only final assessments and shouldn’t kids’ grades be based on what they actually know at the end. The problems with this are: this isn’t college yet, it’s not a universal system so kids who are under it, are compared to kids who aren’t, and these grades have a major effect on the student’s trajectory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or move. When businesses start going after FCPS they tend to listen more.
The whole country is pushing this kind of education policy. You like playing musical chairs? You can’t escape the watering down of academics for purported equity purposes.
Anonymous wrote:Or move. When businesses start going after FCPS they tend to listen more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My high-schooler is in a math class with skills-based grading. The way this pilot program was explained during the open house was that students would have multiple chances at re-assessment and the purpose seemed to be to give kids more chances to master the material. In practice, it seems far more stressful on the students than the regular grading system because they've eliminated all A-, B+ grades and each question receives its own individual grade of A, B, C etc. No partial credit is given, so any mistake automatically results in a B. My child with an A- currently appears to have little chance of raising the grade to an A with half the class left, so is a bit frustrated despite doing pretty well on the exams. Perfect on most of them and with minor mistakes on the others (which seemed like they would have merited an A- or B+ under the previous grading system. So my question is--was this really a way to help tackle grade inflation more than giving kids the chance to demonstrate mastery? I don't plan on saying anything to the teacher or school, I'm just internally questioning why this change was made, especially since it is coming for all classes next year.
The SB and many schools see this as a more equitable approach. In other words, equity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, this isn’t coming from the board. It’s coming from administrators. And I am not understanding that this is equity driven. It seems harder to get good grades.
Here’s the explanation: https://www.gse.harvard.edu/news/ed/19/05/grade-expectations
The idea is that grades should reflect what the kid knows at the end. That means, grades for quizzes, homework, class work, participation, etc. count for nothing. It also means for kids who are low A students down to about C+ students, their grades will often come down because there is no buffer to help boost their grade to the next level. Kids who are tippy top As, are fine, but that’s not the majority.
Of course, you also have teachers who have very hard grading policies, extremely hard tests, and are poor teachers. Add that to some schools/teachers applying this process and others aren’t, it’s a terrible policy. I know others will argue that in college there are only final assessments and shouldn’t kids’ grades be based on what they actually know at the end. The problems with this are: this isn’t college yet, it’s not a universal system so kids who are under it, are compared to kids who aren’t, and these grades have a major effect on the student’s trajectory.
If that's the policy, the exams should be standardized across departments and weighted to whatever the average is supposed to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, this isn’t coming from the board. It’s coming from administrators. And I am not understanding that this is equity driven. It seems harder to get good grades.
Here’s the explanation: https://www.gse.harvard.edu/news/ed/19/05/grade-expectations
The idea is that grades should reflect what the kid knows at the end. That means, grades for quizzes, homework, class work, participation, etc. count for nothing. It also means for kids who are low A students down to about C+ students, their grades will often come down because there is no buffer to help boost their grade to the next level. Kids who are tippy top As, are fine, but that’s not the majority.
Of course, you also have teachers who have very hard grading policies, extremely hard tests, and are poor teachers. Add that to some schools/teachers applying this process and others aren’t, it’s a terrible policy. I know others will argue that in college there are only final assessments and shouldn’t kids’ grades be based on what they actually know at the end. The problems with this are: this isn’t college yet, it’s not a universal system so kids who are under it, are compared to kids who aren’t, and these grades have a major effect on the student’s trajectory.
Anonymous wrote:Again, this isn’t coming from the board. It’s coming from administrators. And I am not understanding that this is equity driven. It seems harder to get good grades.