Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, so just give Credit/No Credit or Pass/Incomplete for the 2nd Semester and call it over. HYP will understand.
Of course, they will. Harvard did the same thing basically: https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2020/03/harvard-college-adopts-temporary-grading-policy-for-spring-term/
Peer institutions, such as Dartmouth, Stanford, Yale, Columbia, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology , have moved to similar grading policies for their spring terms. Factoring equity as a prime motivator, Gay said: “[F]or some students the challenges have been more severe. Some have seen parent job losses, or have had to take over child care and other household responsibilities, as health care and other essential workers in their families continue to provide critical support or have become ill themselves. Those who relied on the public library for internet access are struggling to find other ways to join their classmates online, as public buildings are ordered closed. Students in a time zone 12 hours away from us are feeling remote and closed off by time, and by closed borders.”
Anonymous wrote:
History indicates they’ll err on the side of grade inflation.
So no worries, parents of seniors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, so just give Credit/No Credit or Pass/Incomplete for the 2nd Semester and call it over. HYP will understand.
Of course, they will. Harvard did the same thing basically: https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2020/03/harvard-college-adopts-temporary-grading-policy-for-spring-term/
Anonymous wrote:Right, so just give Credit/No Credit or Pass/Incomplete for the 2nd Semester and call it over. HYP will understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't count Q3 grades for GPA, that's an outrage. It's a huge disservice and unfair.
Remember, too, that current HS students don't get to opt out of MS language and other advanced classes counting toward their GPA. They've made it optional for subsequent years, but if you're going to count 6th grade Spanish for GPA, you damn well better count the grades he got in AP and honors classes as a sophomore.
Maybe you were at a school where the end of Q3 went well, but at my school the kids had tests that had a significant impact on grades after 4 weeks of no instruction. There's unfairness lurking in many of the Q3 grades, too. If your kid was not harmed in the 3rd quarter, you are blessed.
The teachers were not allowed to lower their grades from where they were on March 13th, when school closed. So this scenario didn't happen. If it did, you should contact the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't they use the 3rd quarter grades as they were when schools closed? Wouldn't that be fair?
Why would that be any more fair?
I thought the concern was that kids couldn't tune in once schools closed. So the grades they had before closure could work. Why wouldn't they?
wasn't the quarter almost over anyway??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't they use the 3rd quarter grades as they were when schools closed? Wouldn't that be fair?
Why would that be any more fair?
I thought the concern was that kids couldn't tune in once schools closed. So the grades they had before closure could work. Why wouldn't they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't they use the 3rd quarter grades as they were when schools closed? Wouldn't that be fair?
Why would that be any more fair?
Anonymous wrote:Why can't they use the 3rd quarter grades as they were when schools closed? Wouldn't that be fair?