Anonymous wrote:My senior is generally a good student, but definitely takes advantage of APS's re-test policy. I've warned him several times that in college that isn't going to be possible. Your first test grade is your grade. For those who have kids in college now, how was the transition? Did they adjust quickly to the new expectations, or was it a real struggle?
Anonymous wrote:I’m in awe of this idea of retest. how does it work? Do they take the average of the two tests? How many times can you retest?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College gives rewrites and extra credit and many classes don’t have tests.
Also the curve is crazy.
It will be fine.
None of my kid's professors curve. You get what you get. He said there are no retakes or extra credit. He's a junior and has had a midterm and final for every class except his fine arts class. Maybe if your kid goes to an easy state school like Towson or Salisbury, they might have these things.
DS goes to a top 10 engineering school and he has extra credit, can drop a test, and curves in each class. From my experience, professors tend to make exams extremely difficult to challenge the brightest students. The results are curved to reflect the class distribution.
Is it normal to know (or even want to know) this much detail about your college kids’ professors’ grading policy? I would think that if a kid is at now a Top 10 Engineering school, his parents would be ready to step back from this level of granular awareness.
Anonymous wrote:Well I hope college admissions know which high schools have these retesting and extra credit policies and which ones do not!
My kid has never been allowed any extra credit (let alone a retest) even when they have babes a test!