+1Anonymous wrote:Op, he ‘earned’ an E. End of story. This is the DC’s achievement or lack thereof.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be delighted my kid was being held responsible.
YUP! Same here. Maybe they'll take the class seriously next time since they didn't pass.
You are jerks. Some kids are barely capable of getting through high school yet in our society, you need that diploma to get a job that pays enough to live on and provides the opportunity for affordable health insurance. It sounds like OP’s kid is one of those kids. A failing grade does not necessarily mean a kid didn’t work hard in the class. Sounds like your kids don’t struggle and you should be thankful instead of condescending in a situation that is likely nothing remotely similar to your life experience.
OP, there’s a period during which you can challenge a grade. I’ve done that successfully in several classes where the IEP was not followed. There’s a deadline though so if you believe that is the case, you should look into that now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op you haven't answered whether or not there is an IEP and if it was followed. If that were the case you should have started with that.
A 59.10 does not round up.
I am not sure if the IEP was followed, and not sure how we can tell if the IEP is followed in every class.
As I suggested before, look into whether you can contest the grade. You have to do it quickly.
What happened for us was that my son was given some supplemental work (don’t recall what) and a month to finish it. The grade he got at that point was his final grade. They did much better with the IEP after that point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op you haven't answered whether or not there is an IEP and if it was followed. If that were the case you should have started with that.
A 59.10 does not round up.
I am not sure if the IEP was followed, and not sure how we can tell if the IEP is followed in every class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op you haven't answered whether or not there is an IEP and if it was followed. If that were the case you should have started with that.
A 59.10 does not round up.
I am not sure if the IEP was followed, and not sure how we can tell if the IEP is followed in every class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be delighted my kid was being held responsible.
YUP! Same here. Maybe they'll take the class seriously next time since they didn't pass.
You are jerks. Some kids are barely capable of getting through high school yet in our society, you need that diploma to get a job that pays enough to live on and provides the opportunity for affordable health insurance. It sounds like OP’s kid is one of those kids. A failing grade does not necessarily mean a kid didn’t work hard in the class. Sounds like your kids don’t struggle and you should be thankful instead of condescending in a situation that is likely nothing remotely similar to your life experience.
OP, there’s a period during which you can challenge a grade. I’ve done that successfully in several classes where the IEP was not followed. There’s a deadline though so if you believe that is the case, you should look into that now.
So in your opinion, all that should be required to pass a class is that a kid tries hard? No objective knowledge test?
Let me guess - you're a millennial?
Nope. Not a millennial. Just someone who thinks that when you act like a kid who has disabilities got a failing grade due to some character flaw that can be corrected, you’re a jerk. Kids with disabilities fail classes even when they’re trying and can’t always pass a class by trying harder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be delighted my kid was being held responsible.
YUP! Same here. Maybe they'll take the class seriously next time since they didn't pass.
You are jerks. Some kids are barely capable of getting through high school yet in our society, you need that diploma to get a job that pays enough to live on and provides the opportunity for affordable health insurance. It sounds like OP’s kid is one of those kids. A failing grade does not necessarily mean a kid didn’t work hard in the class. Sounds like your kids don’t struggle and you should be thankful instead of condescending in a situation that is likely nothing remotely similar to your life experience.
OP, there’s a period during which you can challenge a grade. I’ve done that successfully in several classes where the IEP was not followed. There’s a deadline though so if you believe that is the case, you should look into that now.
So in your opinion, all that should be required to pass a class is that a kid tries hard? No objective knowledge test?
Let me guess - you're a millennial?
Anonymous wrote:Does any other school district use E for failing grades instead of F? I’ve never heard of it until MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Will you be okay with a teacher didn't change a 59.10% to D?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op you haven't answered whether or not there is an IEP and if it was followed. If that were the case you should have started with that.
A 59.10 does not round up.
I am not sure if the IEP was followed, and not sure how we can tell if the IEP is followed in every class.