This past week I overheard two conversations that reminded me
of the need for standards-based grading.
Conversation 1: in produce section of grocery store between
a parent and a middle school teacher who I’ll call Mr. Smith
Parent: Good to see you Mr. Smith. How’s Jon [another
pseudonym] doing?
Mr. Smith: Jon’s one of my best students. His test scores
are always among the best in the class. I think he had the highest score on the last test.
Parent: That’s great! He really enjoys your class.
Mr. Smith: Thanks. He's a pleasure to teach.
What's wrong with this conversation?
Simply, why is the teacher comparing Jon’s performance against
other students? Assessments and grades should be used to provide meaningful
feedback in relation to learning objectives. Grades should never be used to
rank and sort students. I'm sure the teacher meant well and the parent was clearly pleased with this impromptu progress report, but does the parent truly know How's my child doing?
Conversation 2: overheard at a basketball game
Parent: Did you get your test back?
Middle school student: (Sheepishly) Yes.
(Parent tilts her head and gives her daughter “the eye.”)
Student: I got a 60. But everyone did badly.
(Long pause as parent simply stares through the child.)
Student (with cautionary optimism): She gave us an extra credit assignment to pull up
our grade.
Parent: Get it out and start working on it.
What's wrong with this conversation?
I applaud the teacher for recognizing that the entire class
struggled on the test (assuming the student didn’t make it up). But instead of
assigning an extra credit assignment to raise students’ grades, the teacher
should be reflecting on her own professional practices to ensure improved
achievement. This should include re-teaching and re-assessment.
While some extra credit assignments do equate to increased
learning or mastery of the objective, most extra credit assignments dilute the
meaning of grades. For example, in this case, it sounds as if the student simply
needs to complete additional work to raise her grade; meaning the quantity of
work becomes more important than the quality of the understanding.
If, as the student stated, most students did poorly, it’s
not a learning problem. It’s a teaching problem that requires corrective
action.
Four Standards-Based Grading Principles Relevant to These Conversations
- Grades should focus on results rather than activities. Emphasis should be on learning and not competition and completion.
- Assessments provide information for students AND teacher.
- If a particular concept or skill is worth assessing then it’s important enough to teach and teach well.
- Teachers should follow assessments with high-quality corrective actions and students should be given additional opportunities to demonstrate mastery.