Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blair is not giving out As easily! But it could be different depending on the teacher. My kids are in honors classes so teachers expect a lot (which I'm fine with).
Sorry to burst your bubble.. but Blair is giving out As easily. And everyone is in honors now.
My Blair kids aren’t getting all A’s.
There’s a 9th grade English teacher who is grading most kids Bs and Cs. Kids who are strong students. Many magnet kids are struggling in precalc with a tough teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blair is not giving out As easily! But it could be different depending on the teacher. My kids are in honors classes so teachers expect a lot (which I'm fine with).
Sorry to burst your bubble.. but Blair is giving out As easily. And everyone is in honors now.
My Blair kids aren’t getting all A’s.
Anonymous wrote:However, the 50% rule isn’t why students are not attempting assignments. Students don’t attempt when they lack the skills to do the work and/or they don’t see the value in the assignment.
Anonymous wrote:We tell the students to put your name on the paper for 50 percent. This teaches the kids 1/100th of an assignment equals 50%. That's called mcps math. And no it does not make sense and is part of the forever lowering the bar game
Anonymous wrote:DC attends MCPS high school and we feel they are not learning much, but get excellent grades. Do others have the impression schools are extremely lenient with grading? I am worried MCPS students will not be prepared for college if teachers are forced to give students the grades admin thinks parents expect. Am I off base here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blair is not giving out As easily! But it could be different depending on the teacher. My kids are in honors classes so teachers expect a lot (which I'm fine with).
Sorry to burst your bubble.. but Blair is giving out As easily. And everyone is in honors now.
Anonymous wrote:Blair is not giving out As easily! But it could be different depending on the teacher. My kids are in honors classes so teachers expect a lot (which I'm fine with).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the person who made the claim and of course I am referring to weighted GPA. It is impossible to have higher than a 4.0 unweighted GPA in MCPS.
Some of you...
Then you should have said so, upfront.
Anonymous wrote:I am the person who made the claim and of course I am referring to weighted GPA. It is impossible to have higher than a 4.0 unweighted GPA in MCPS.
Some of you...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a student can get a 79 in one quarter and 89 in the other and still get an A, that is 100% grade inflation. You all should be worried because if your kid gets a B, it looks really really bad to the college admissions officer who is evaluating their transcript. A B in an MCPS school is like a C in the nearby private schools. Just sayin.
Sorry that would be a B and this is an extreme and unlikely example.
As a teacher, it is very common for a student to get an 89.5 (or just above) one quarter and therefore earn an A, and then get a very low B, sometimes even a 79.5 and therefore have an A on the transcript.
I don't know what colleges think about Bs on transcripts from MCPS schools, but students earning As on transcripts that mathematically were not As, is very common.
+1. All you have to do is look at the profiles mcps high schools send colleges to see how rampant grade inflation has become. Over 50% of students have a 4.0 or better. If you have any Bs you are literally in the bottom half of the class.
Share a link, not of a magnet program but an entire high school that has 50 percent with 4.0.
As requested
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/schools/high-schools/r-w/woottonhs/uploadedfiles/counseling/school_profile__wootton_high_2017-2018.pdf
Um, that shows 45% have an unweighted GPA between 3.51 and 4.0. Far cry from 50% at 4.0.
16% 4.51 and above; 34% 4.01-4.5
16+34= 50% at 4.01 and above
You’re looking at the wrong numbers. The claim was about unweighted GPA.
The claim was 50% have a 4.0 or better. You can’t have better with an unweighted GPA. Unless I’m missing the part where they claim unweighted
Unless they specified, which they didn’t, the default is unweighted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a student can get a 79 in one quarter and 89 in the other and still get an A, that is 100% grade inflation. You all should be worried because if your kid gets a B, it looks really really bad to the college admissions officer who is evaluating their transcript. A B in an MCPS school is like a C in the nearby private schools. Just sayin.
Sorry that would be a B and this is an extreme and unlikely example.
As a teacher, it is very common for a student to get an 89.5 (or just above) one quarter and therefore earn an A, and then get a very low B, sometimes even a 79.5 and therefore have an A on the transcript.
I don't know what colleges think about Bs on transcripts from MCPS schools, but students earning As on transcripts that mathematically were not As, is very common.
+1. All you have to do is look at the profiles mcps high schools send colleges to see how rampant grade inflation has become. Over 50% of students have a 4.0 or better. If you have any Bs you are literally in the bottom half of the class.
Share a link, not of a magnet program but an entire high school that has 50 percent with 4.0.
As requested
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/schools/high-schools/r-w/woottonhs/uploadedfiles/counseling/school_profile__wootton_high_2017-2018.pdf
Um, that shows 45% have an unweighted GPA between 3.51 and 4.0. Far cry from 50% at 4.0.
Doesn't know how to read a chart...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a student can get a 79 in one quarter and 89 in the other and still get an A, that is 100% grade inflation. You all should be worried because if your kid gets a B, it looks really really bad to the college admissions officer who is evaluating their transcript. A B in an MCPS school is like a C in the nearby private schools. Just sayin.
Sorry that would be a B and this is an extreme and unlikely example.
As a teacher, it is very common for a student to get an 89.5 (or just above) one quarter and therefore earn an A, and then get a very low B, sometimes even a 79.5 and therefore have an A on the transcript.
I don't know what colleges think about Bs on transcripts from MCPS schools, but students earning As on transcripts that mathematically were not As, is very common.
+1. All you have to do is look at the profiles mcps high schools send colleges to see how rampant grade inflation has become. Over 50% of students have a 4.0 or better. If you have any Bs you are literally in the bottom half of the class.
Share a link, not of a magnet program but an entire high school that has 50 percent with 4.0.
As requested
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/schools/high-schools/r-w/woottonhs/uploadedfiles/counseling/school_profile__wootton_high_2017-2018.pdf
Um, that shows 45% have an unweighted GPA between 3.51 and 4.0. Far cry from 50% at 4.0.
16% 4.51 and above; 34% 4.01-4.5
16+34= 50% at 4.01 and above
You’re looking at the wrong numbers. The claim was about unweighted GPA.
The claim was 50% have a 4.0 or better. You can’t have better with an unweighted GPA. Unless I’m missing the part where they claim unweighted
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a student can get a 79 in one quarter and 89 in the other and still get an A, that is 100% grade inflation. You all should be worried because if your kid gets a B, it looks really really bad to the college admissions officer who is evaluating their transcript. A B in an MCPS school is like a C in the nearby private schools. Just sayin.
Sorry that would be a B and this is an extreme and unlikely example.
As a teacher, it is very common for a student to get an 89.5 (or just above) one quarter and therefore earn an A, and then get a very low B, sometimes even a 79.5 and therefore have an A on the transcript.
I don't know what colleges think about Bs on transcripts from MCPS schools, but students earning As on transcripts that mathematically were not As, is very common.
+1. All you have to do is look at the profiles mcps high schools send colleges to see how rampant grade inflation has become. Over 50% of students have a 4.0 or better. If you have any Bs you are literally in the bottom half of the class.
Share a link, not of a magnet program but an entire high school that has 50 percent with 4.0.
As requested
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/schools/high-schools/r-w/woottonhs/uploadedfiles/counseling/school_profile__wootton_high_2017-2018.pdf
Um, that shows 45% have an unweighted GPA between 3.51 and 4.0. Far cry from 50% at 4.0.