Anonymous wrote:Where are these mythical schools that inflate grades? If anything, my kids' school deflates them at every available opportunity. FCPS high school.
Anonymous wrote:What level of classes is he taking? You realize a 26 is a good ACT score, right? Not everyone is going to get above a 30. Check out the score distribution curve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
The AVERAGE American 12th grader has an A average GPA in 2020. Grade inflation is insane. So a low B average is really suspect — especially since we know that’s with parents micromanaging and the luxury of multiple tutors.
Grade inflation is out of control if a student gets an A first quarter and a b the next they get an A for the semester. But in reality it is much lower.
the lowest A is a 89.5 and the lowest B is a 79.5 so that average is an 84.5 which is an A on the transcript but is actually a mid B.
These kids are going to get crushed in the real world.
I'd love to know what schools are inflating grades. Too bad my own kid isn't a beneficiary of this practice.
MCPS.
An A and a B combo (over two semesters) gets reported as an A (for the year), for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
The AVERAGE American 12th grader has an A average GPA in 2020. Grade inflation is insane. So a low B average is really suspect — especially since we know that’s with parents micromanaging and the luxury of multiple tutors.
Grade inflation is out of control if a student gets an A first quarter and a b the next they get an A for the semester. But in reality it is much lower.
the lowest A is a 89.5 and the lowest B is a 79.5 so that average is an 84.5 which is an A on the transcript but is actually a mid B.
These kids are going to get crushed in the real world.
I'd love to know what schools are inflating grades. Too bad my own kid isn't a beneficiary of this practice.
MCPS.
An A and a B combo (over two semesters) gets reported as an A (for the year), for example.
Whatever it computes to mathematically. So, an 82 and a 96 (or lower) would = a B for the year.
That’s effectively rounding. What would you have the grade be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
The AVERAGE American 12th grader has an A average GPA in 2020. Grade inflation is insane. So a low B average is really suspect — especially since we know that’s with parents micromanaging and the luxury of multiple tutors.
Grade inflation is out of control if a student gets an A first quarter and a b the next they get an A for the semester. But in reality it is much lower.
the lowest A is a 89.5 and the lowest B is a 79.5 so that average is an 84.5 which is an A on the transcript but is actually a mid B.
These kids are going to get crushed in the real world.
I'd love to know what schools are inflating grades. Too bad my own kid isn't a beneficiary of this practice.
MCPS.
An A and a B combo (over two semesters) gets reported as an A (for the year), for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
The AVERAGE American 12th grader has an A average GPA in 2020. Grade inflation is insane. So a low B average is really suspect — especially since we know that’s with parents micromanaging and the luxury of multiple tutors.
Grade inflation is out of control if a student gets an A first quarter and a b the next they get an A for the semester. But in reality it is much lower.
the lowest A is a 89.5 and the lowest B is a 79.5 so that average is an 84.5 which is an A on the transcript but is actually a mid B.
These kids are going to get crushed in the real world.
I'd love to know what schools are inflating grades. Too bad my own kid isn't a beneficiary of this practice.
Anonymous wrote:It may be hard to tell exactly which high schools from the outside, from the parent perspective. The UCs collected data on this for that report linked upthread somewhere. It's interesting to see the differences in test score ranges vs GPA for the UCs, which are known to weigh GPA heavily; lower test scores compared to other similarly-ranked colleges but with sky-high GPAs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
The AVERAGE American 12th grader has an A average GPA in 2020. Grade inflation is insane. So a low B average is really suspect — especially since we know that’s with parents micromanaging and the luxury of multiple tutors.
Grade inflation is out of control if a student gets an A first quarter and a b the next they get an A for the semester. But in reality it is much lower.
the lowest A is a 89.5 and the lowest B is a 79.5 so that average is an 84.5 which is an A on the transcript but is actually a mid B.
These kids are going to get crushed in the real world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
The AVERAGE American 12th grader has an A average GPA in 2020. Grade inflation is insane. So a low B average is really suspect — especially since we know that’s with parents micromanaging and the luxury of multiple tutors.
Anonymous wrote:American University has a great program for kids w LDs and executive functioning challenges and he’d be close to home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is a 3.0 and 26 ACT bad?? Good grief.
OP here. Thanks for your message. I think that those stats are normally fine, but for our DS, he has tutoring in 3 of his 6 classes, and I am pretty sure that his GPA would be lower without the tutoring support. Also, he had extra time on the ACT. I can't be sure, but it seems like that must be helpful, at least for the reading section where you have time to go back to the passage to check your answers.