holaolah shares
14 years ago
latest #22
Geoteach says
14 years ago
very interesting, caused me to really think about what I am doing
GingerLewman says
14 years ago
holaolah: How do you feel about it?
holaolah
14 years ago
GingerTPLC I changed my grading practices DRASTICALLY several years ago.
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holaolah
14 years ago
I sincerely believe that the students grade HAS to reflect what they KNOW. Not if they are lazy, difficult, irresponsible, etc.
holaolah
14 years ago
I don't give 0's for incomplete assignments. They MUST do something to show me what they know. A 0 lets students off the hook too easy!
holaolah
14 years ago
Parents always ask "why does x have a c" and I can easily explain because that is what he/she KNOWS. Not that they missed x assignments
holaolah
14 years ago
It takes the conversation away from behavior and lets us focus on what we can do to help the student be successful in my class.
holaolah
14 years ago
Of course the conversation often does go to the fact that the student needs to PRACTICE more (meaning DO HW)
holaolah
14 years ago
but the conversation never gets away from what the student know and really parents can't argue with that! :-)
holaolah
14 years ago
P.S. if student absolutely refuses to do ANYTHING that I can objectively grade I give 50%
GingerLewman says
14 years ago
holaolah: I'm liking your thinking so far. What's your justification for the 50% for nothing?
holaolah
14 years ago
I have found that given all other factors a 50% doesn't really change the students real grade. It shows the student and paren
holaolah
14 years ago
that I can't assess what the student knows since she wouldn't complete the assignment (I'd be happy to change the 50% if they completed it)
holaolah
14 years ago
It isn't a hole so deep that the student can't recover. The 50% is mostly just a wake up call to students and parents to start a dialogue
holaolah
14 years ago
about the academics of the class - not the students behavior.
GingerLewman says
14 years ago
holaolah: Not bad! You use consequences and not punishment. :-) Focused on growth, not making yourself feel better about a kid's misbehavior
holaolah
14 years ago
I'm also probably overly hopeful that even though a student wasn't successful at an assignment they learned SOMETHING! :-)
GingerLewman says
14 years ago
When a kid doesn't turn something in for us (knowing, of course we're in a different situation), they're not finished. They don't get to
holaolah
14 years ago
A zero means they learned NOTHING! How depressing! :-)
GingerLewman says
14 years ago
call the year finished until they're finished. That being said, it's not about worksheets and assignments, but about projects that demo what
GingerLewman says
14 years ago
they learned. We're very similar in our approaches.
holaolah
14 years ago
It seems so. :-) For me it really wasn't about the grading and the rubrics...it is about a change in the way I thought student learning
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