Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:70% correct on a test would not be a P, at least not at our school. It might be an I, but borderline N. So let's not exaggerate that C students are getting Ps.
Read carefully - no one is exaggerating that C students are getting P, its your own interpretation. I am just asking how much of the content has been mastered by students who get P? Maybe it is 80% of the content which would translate to a "B".
Hypothetically - if mastering 80% of content got you a P, then if 70 - 80 % of students were getting P on their report-cards it would mean that 70-80% of MCPS ES students were at least a B or above. Which is incredibly good show by MCPS don't you think?
And if this is the case - everything which we discuss in this forum - segregation of schools, HS students failing in Math finals, students being unprepared for schools etc. are not that big of an issue. MCPS is on the right track for majority of students. We will not see such epic fail in MS when these ES students land there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:70% correct on a test would not be a P, at least not at our school. It might be an I, but borderline N. So let's not exaggerate that C students are getting Ps.
Read carefully - no one is exaggerating that C students are getting P, its your own interpretation. I am just asking how much of the content has been mastered by students who get P? Maybe it is 80% of the content which would translate to a "B".
Hypothetically - if mastering 80% of content got you a P, then if 70 - 80 % of students were getting P on their report-cards it would mean that 70-80% of MCPS ES students were at least a B or above. Which is incredibly good show by MCPS don't you think?
And if this is the case - everything which we discuss in this forum - segregation of schools, HS students failing in Math finals, students being unprepared for schools etc. are not that big of an issue. MCPS is on the right track for majority of students. We will not see such epic fail in MS when these ES students land there.
Anonymous wrote:70% correct on a test would not be a P, at least not at our school. It might be an I, but borderline N. So let's not exaggerate that C students are getting Ps.