Recently in the news up here in DC - but a local high school is removing most "F"s from their grading scales.
11/15/2010 3:38:52 PM
durp[Edited on November 15, 2010 at 3:43 PM. Reason : durp]
11/15/2010 3:41:03 PM
i blame parents and their embarrassing disregard for the educational welfare of their childrenget your kid off the vidya games and stick their nose in a booki've been meaning to make an educational reform thread for a while but couldn't manage to put together a reasonable starter thread without my frustration and disappointment at education in this country turning into rage and vulgarities[Edited on November 15, 2010 at 3:43 PM. Reason : .]
11/15/2010 3:41:47 PM
I went to 3 different elementary schools and didn't have letter grades until 4th/5th grade. Before that it was some other shit like "M," "S," and "I." (M was the best)I'm wondering whether this will have any cognizable change whatsoever in student behavior/motivation. My guess is that if a kid doesn't give enough of a shit about his or her work to get an F, calling it something different isn't going to change anything.The problem is that you have an entire generation of students infected by the notion that they can get what they want without working for it, while those who work hard and do well are social pariahs (the latter is nothing new).
11/15/2010 3:48:03 PM
Sorry I thought this thread was about UNC-CH.
11/15/2010 3:50:42 PM
I don't see this fixing much. The kids who are OK with getting F's are the ones who will now get I's and still not care or do the work. The only way to really make things better is to somehow make all the kids want to do well and feel interested in the material. And as much as people try, I don't think that's something that can be easily accomplished, especially if the parents don't step up and start encouraging the kids to care about academics and achieve more from infancy. I went to a Montessori school that had no grades or marks of any kind, aside from the yearly standardized testing we had to take, through sixth grade. I loved it because it taught me to focus on understanding the material rather than just cramming for tests (we also didn't actually have tests ever). That was something that amazed me when I went to a traditional school in seventh grade — so many people just cared about the letter on the exam rather than actually learning the information. The reason the gradeless system worked for the kids there was we all wanted to learn. Our parents gave us books and took us to museums and were involved in the process of our education. But if the kids just don't care about learning and aren't getting any incentive from home either, then the grading structure or lack thereof isn't really going to help too much.
11/15/2010 3:59:01 PM
11/15/2010 4:00:53 PM
If I read the article correctly, it sounds like if someone gets an F in English 1 they have to provide some additional amount of work to get a D instead of retaking the class. If they can't prove some level of mastery then they have to retake the class. Seems like this is just a method for pushing the kids with low intelligence or poor motivation through the system faster. I dont see how this really affects typical or above average students. High school students that get multiple F's in remedial classes don't usually compete for jobs that require good grades.
11/15/2010 4:02:03 PM
Need I remind you that this is the American Public School System we're talking about here, where 8th place medals and participation ribbons are par for the course. The removal of F's on the grading scale is just the next logical step, soon to be followed by outlawing pop quizzes and renaming detention "timeout", eventually resulting in a generation of pussified miscreants who have no idea how to function in a society outside of their protective bubbles.
11/15/2010 4:02:06 PM
Seems like this is going to teach kids that deadlines don't mean shit
11/15/2010 4:13:13 PM
When are these idiots gonna realize that the world needs ditch diggers just like it needs doctors.
11/15/2010 4:24:00 PM
http://the-op.com/media/image2.php?ep=110&i=1&cat=6200[Edited on November 15, 2010 at 4:26 PM. Reason : link fail. can't rehost from work.]
11/15/2010 4:25:20 PM
I'm going to provide a point for the opposition here, in hopes that it'll spurn some thought (as opposed to the rampant hate going on here).Consider the following: A student "forgets" (even if he just didn't do it) to turn in some assignments for their algebra class. When mid semester report cards come out, they have an I in the class. Let's say someone puts their ass in gear when that happens. Their parents reinforce that they expect better, their guidance counselor lets them know they'll never get into college with an F in algebra, their Wendy's job won't let them work if they don't pass all their classes in a semester... whatever, I digress.So let's say over the next 9 weeks the kid does all the work he was assigned, learns the material, does better on the tests, and passes the EOC in the 98th percentile. Then this kid has turned around his whole semester with the opportunity to make an A or B in the class because he wasn't stuck in that F,D,C range because of his first nine weeks. Does he not deserve that? Also, if he doesn't get his ass in gear, he continues to fail the class and is given the F at the end of the semester that he earned. This idea is more for helping people who slip up early than it is coddling losers. And let's be honest, our best Einstein's aren't always our best students, so if the kid merits the good grades to get through shouldn't he get them?
11/15/2010 4:47:41 PM
The day the working world allows "Incompletes" and "make-up" work then we can drop F's from the education system. Failure is an important lesson to learn. Protecting kids from the harsh realities of life is doing them great a disservice.
11/15/2010 5:05:52 PM
Treating an educational system like "the working world" is a bad idea in itself.
11/15/2010 5:13:57 PM
My high school also did not have "F"s and a D was considered failing...
11/15/2010 5:42:25 PM
after reading the article, i'm a little confused by the OP and some other posts. And the thread title is misleading.They're not getting rid of "F"s. Essentially, all that's happening is that the students are being given more time to complete assignments. If they don't complete them in the allotted time, they'll still get an F.They still have to do the work and show that they've learned the material. Nobody is being "pushed to the next level" because of this change.
11/15/2010 5:52:23 PM
This type shortsightedness seems to be the rule among administrators, these days. 1. Our kids are failing because of F's. Oh no!2. Make it easier to pass.3. Kids are allowed to be even more lazy; learn even less material.4. More F's My principal discourages zeros. As in, 40-60 should be the minimum grade students can receive. My superintendent encourages us to grade on the "L-Curve:" some F's, less D's, some C's, more B's, and even more A's. They're hitting diminishing returns, big time, on their way towards 100% on grade level by 2014 (NCLB), so they're trying all sorts of stupid crap and completely removing consequences and student responsibility from the equation.
11/15/2010 5:54:13 PM
the school system that I work does not allow a student to be given below a 60 for the first 9 weeks (1st quarter) of a semester. so... regardless of what the students score is (0-59) it "magically" turns into a 60 on report card day. I had to give one of my students a 44 point curve. The students who worked hard, pushed themselves to earn a passing grade of a 70 or higher did not receive any curve.Is this fair?I've had many students tell me they're "checking out" for first quarter and they'll put some effort in 2nd quarter.
11/15/2010 7:48:51 PM
11/15/2010 7:56:12 PM
^^ Thats how it is in a lot of schools. They say its to allow the student to "recover" and still pass. Im just waiting to see this happen at the college level (Oh Snap it is already at UNC )That or see how much bitching these kids do when they get to college.
11/15/2010 8:27:38 PM
In CMS, the policy is that a teacher is not allowed to give a grade below a 60%.If a student turns in nothing, then the get a 60. We have to do that, so they can recover later if they do better.It is a BS policy that encourages doing absolutely nothing. We are also only allowed to count 10% of the grade from homework. That way when they don't do it their grade doesn't suffer too much.All a student has to do is a couple HW assignments and barely pass a test in order to pass each quarter.I work for CMS btw.
11/15/2010 8:35:00 PM
i blame the parents completely.
11/15/2010 8:38:40 PM
11/15/2010 8:40:47 PM
while i understand the whole seeing an F on their report could possibly cause a child to lose confidence in themselves and not want to try harder the rest of the semester - there's a fucking reason that they're given that F. AstralEngine said above that maybe they just missed a few assignments or something. if they've only missed a few assignments then that alone isn't why they're receiving an F most likely. there must be other things contributing to that grade.imho more children, not less children, need to be getting Fs. if they don't do the work, they don't put in the effort, then they have no business being promoted to the next grade.
11/15/2010 8:42:08 PM
11/15/2010 8:59:09 PM
11/15/2010 10:06:33 PM
This only further drives the point that kids today are morons. This only strengthens the argument.]
11/15/2010 10:10:21 PM
They aren't the ones putting this policy into place.
11/15/2010 10:19:45 PM
The problem is that schools (read admin) have stopped caring about teaching and more about bureaucracy, numbers, and data.
11/15/2010 10:52:01 PM
1) as already mentioned, title is very misleading. they are not removing F's. just allowing more time to make up the work. the alternative is an F and the kid never goes back to learn the material. at least in this case, some (perhaps only a few) will revisit the material and learn it.2) i'm a teacher and have tried something similar this semester. first of all the 100 point scale is completely faulty, especially with our role as teachers. google it. 3) to everyone complaining about students barely passing their tests and passing the class, principals with crappy policies about not giving 0s, etc....the problem is not the policies you're forced to deal with. the problem is the rigor of your tests and what you're actually looking for when you grade. if a kid passes my class it's because they have done a decent job learning the material. Also, if a kid doesn't do homework, but aces the tests, that kid should get an A if the class is structured right. kids shouldn't be doing busy work for the sake of busy work.4) this idea definitely has some problems, namely...
11/15/2010 11:49:04 PM
GET THE 'F' OUT OF SCHOOL
11/16/2010 12:08:10 AM
11/16/2010 3:15:17 AM
Like duro982 noted, they're still giving out Fs. If you come to class and bomb the tests and turn in incoherent essays and mumble through your presentations, you're gonna get an F.The I grade applies to missed work. If, for whatever reason, a kid misses a test, a zero does not reflect his mastery of the material (an automatic 60 doesn't either, of course--I hate that policy!). Again, a huge amount of Fs that students "earn" do not reflect their mastery of the material...they reflect the fact that they missed a couple tests. I'm a fan of null grades or using a students performance on the relevant portion of a final exam to reflect the test that he missed. But the I grade works, too...give them a chance to make the work up!Of course, like wolfpackgrrr, the I grade may reinforce the notion that deadlines don't matter. Also, students love them some strategery when it comes to grades...I'd hate for a kid to put off work, thinking he could make it up, and then get in over his head and fail.And remember, guys, policies like this one have been around forever--they're just making it official so that all kids can take advantage of it and not just the kids with pushy parents. I just stepped outside for a smoke, and I can assure you that the sky is not falling!
11/16/2010 4:40:08 AM
11/16/2010 7:16:40 AM
I read the article and several experts mention that the I policy applies to failed tests and assignments as well.
11/16/2010 9:12:13 AM
11/16/2010 9:22:34 AM
11/16/2010 9:46:26 AM
at its core education isn't about doling out grades, it's about instilling competency. these aren't the kids that are competing to get into harvard or even ncsu, so whether the grade is a C, D or F isn't particularly relevant for them
11/16/2010 10:03:05 AM
11/16/2010 1:16:57 PM
11/16/2010 4:26:55 PM
I nearly signed up for a class next semester at UNC, one that NCSU doesn't offer. I was weighing 3 different classes for my 1 elective spot. I ended up following one of my professors advice to focus on a class that will help develop a more marketable skill, so I didn't end up signing up for the inter-institutional course at UNC.Before I had decided not to go through with it, I had contacted the UNC prof to get more info about the course though and asked for her thoughts on the interinstitutional thing. She told me she was up for it, and has done it before, but that she'd just need to convert my grades from Hs, Ps, or Ls to real grades to get it to count at State. I've been told they use those letters so that their grad students wont have GPAs.[Edited on November 16, 2010 at 4:36 PM. Reason : .]
11/16/2010 4:36:09 PM
I think this is a great idea!It means less competition for my job in the years to come
11/16/2010 5:02:18 PM
It's like a strawman holocaust in here.
11/16/2010 5:04:01 PM
11/16/2010 5:09:12 PM
11/16/2010 5:19:32 PM
^ Sound like some Montessori sort of philosophy if I had to guess. I also have no idea what they're talking about.
11/16/2010 5:34:22 PM
I can't even invent ways to be pissed off at a 100 point scale. I can't imagine it's because you'd be pissed off at the number 100. It's an arbitrary number with enough precision to reflect a wide range of results.Maybe you just have a problem with numbers themselves? Yea, fuck numbers. I'm giving you a grade of pineapple.
11/16/2010 5:38:49 PM
From what I gather, they don't have a problem with 100, they have a problem with starting at 0. So, a 60-100 point scale would be fine with them. Which is stupid, of course.
11/16/2010 6:03:36 PM
It's like minimum wage, but where you don't even have to show up to get payed.Oh, wait.At least we're preparing them for the real world.
11/16/2010 6:27:04 PM