Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

petronius

(26,695 posts)
40. Thanks for the clarification - that is bizarre. One way I can see this working
Fri Jun 21, 2013, 10:25 AM
Jun 2013

is if teachers were allowed to give 'no credit' for (true) scores below 50%, and require students to repeat assignments until at least half the points were earned. That would still be grade inflation of a sort, but it would encourage learning to some degree.

However, I gather that option is not available...

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Shades of Lake Woebegon customerserviceguy Jun 2013 #1
LOL! My first thought as well! proud2BlibKansan Jun 2013 #3
Except not really. pnwmom Jun 2013 #24
Mathematically customerserviceguy Jun 2013 #31
Every classroom, and every school LWolf Jun 2013 #44
I support this. Chan790 Jun 2013 #2
I think it's insane proud2BlibKansan Jun 2013 #4
It's just about how an ordinal level of measurement maps onto a percentage scale HereSince1628 Jun 2013 #37
There should be different tracks Rosa Luxemburg Jun 2013 #18
Truly "The Onion" material. Igel Jun 2013 #5
At my elementary school, 93-100 was an A Art_from_Ark Jun 2013 #10
That was the scale in my district through 12th grade (n/t) MadrasT Jun 2013 #36
I had teachers that would throw out the lowest score csziggy Jun 2013 #27
My district partially does this dsc Jun 2013 #6
We have had this for years, but I forget why! LOL femmocrat Jun 2013 #7
Why does it matter Travis_0004 Jun 2013 #9
I think it matters for their QPA. femmocrat Jun 2013 #11
class rank doesn't matter anymore either. The valedictoiran at my daughter's school didn't get liberal_at_heart Jun 2013 #45
I am of two minds on this... actslikeacarrot Jun 2013 #8
the 0-5 scale makes sense to me -- the 50-100 seems odd, but fishwax Jun 2013 #12
So if a student gets every question wrong on a test, he'll receive a 50% grade? Rod Walker Jun 2013 #13
Yep caraher Jun 2013 #16
It is just on the report card in our district. femmocrat Jun 2013 #17
But there'd be no way to differentiate between a kid who did nothing, receiving a 50%, and a kid who Rod Walker Jun 2013 #20
Well, times have changed! LOL femmocrat Jun 2013 #34
That reminds me of Spencer Tracy as Father Flanagan in "Boys Town" (1938) wherein he states: Rod Walker Jun 2013 #35
That's ridiculous. HappyMe Jun 2013 #47
I would have loved it.... Fastcars Jun 2013 #14
The principal was pushing this where my wife did student teaching caraher Jun 2013 #15
Sounds like a perfect way to disguise student irresponsibility MichiganVote Jun 2013 #19
More 'special snowflake' syndrome. *sigh* n/t X_Digger Jun 2013 #21
I don't really get what this means: are they saying that the score on every petronius Jun 2013 #22
It's the former caraher Jun 2013 #30
Thanks for the clarification - that is bizarre. One way I can see this working petronius Jun 2013 #40
Probably not caraher Jun 2013 #46
That does sound extremely frustrating, and a good solution. I always get a laugh petronius Jun 2013 #49
Yeah caraher Jun 2013 #50
keep arranging those deck chairs SoCalDem Jun 2013 #23
If you got 90, 90, and 0 on one exam your average would be 60 failing vinny9698 Jun 2013 #25
As well it should. name not needed Jun 2013 #26
People have bad days, sometimes through no fault of their own vinny9698 Jun 2013 #43
I see your point. I could see how this could be beneficial to special education students or liberal_at_heart Jun 2013 #41
They should rescale the 100, not impose this monstrosity. David__77 Jun 2013 #28
Apparently a bunch of DUers advocate cold hearted punishment AZ Progressive Jun 2013 #29
yeah, apparently poor kids who struggle in school don't deserve a second chance. liberal_at_heart Jun 2013 #42
So if a student turns in a blank test and receives a "0" he's being punished? Rod Walker Jun 2013 #48
Common sense isn't very common One_Life_To_Give Jun 2013 #32
The 0-100 scale has been inflated into meaninglessness as it is Recursion Jun 2013 #33
The school district I taught in tried to do this Ms. Toad Jun 2013 #38
It's called "Minimum F" Nevernose Jun 2013 #39
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»School district eliminate...»Reply #40