1 / 13

Grading Scales

Grading Scales. Roanoke County Public Schools February 24, 2009. How will my child get into college?. Quick Answers. Grades GPA SAT or ACT Rigor of courses Special talents Activities How previous students from the high school performed. How do we compare to other states and divisions?

jaimie
Télécharger la présentation

Grading Scales

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Grading Scales Roanoke County Public Schools February 24, 2009

  2. How will my child get into college?

  3. Quick Answers • Grades • GPA • SAT or ACT • Rigor of courses • Special talents • Activities • How previous students from the high school performed

  4. How do we compare to other states and divisions? How many A’s and B’s do our students earn? How does weighting affect GPA? When did we last change our grading scale? How do colleges deal with all this information? Does our grading scale hurt college acceptance? How do we decide? What is fair? Questions to answer

  5. How do we compare to other states? • 1999 VEA-last comparison of 123 VA grading scales • Virginia does not have a mandated grading scale. • States which reportedly have mandated grading scales: Georgia, Tennessee, West Virginia, Florida, Alabama • Only Florida actually does (a 10-point scale) • Others mandate weighting, or have gone back to local option

  6. Comparison in Virginia: It is not just about the grading scale • In a 1999 survey of divisions in Virginia, Roanoke Co was one of 59 out of 123 divisions with A=94-100. • 4 had A=90-100, 1 had A91-100, 5 had A=92-100, 35 had A=93-100,19 had A=95-100 • In a 2002 survey of 27 like divisions: 25 had A = 93 (or above) to 100 • In 2009 survey of 6 divisions like ours (Albemarle, Botetourt, Chesterfield, Hanover, Stafford,Prince William) : 2 had A=94-100, 2 had A=93-100, 1 changed in 2007-08 to A=90-100, 1 is pending. • Recent grading scale changes seen in Fairfax, Stafford (pending), Loudon • Weighting practices varies from division to division. • Valedictorian status varies.

  7. When did we last change our grading scale? • Grading scale prior to 1992-1993: A=95-100 B=88-94 C=81-87 D=75-80 F=74 and below • Grading scale 1992-1993 and after: A=94-100 B=87-93 C=78-86 D=70-77 F=69 and below • What happened to percentages of grades? In the next six years, percentages of A’s stayed the same and B’s actually went down 3.2%. A restructuring of expectations? • Since 1998, percentages increased A’s 8%, B’s 3.2% (in comparison with 1993-1999).

  8. How many A’s and B’s are there? • Virginia schools are required to report their distribution of grades, i.e., what percent of grades were A’s, B’s, etc. • Examples: in two similar systems, A’s ranged from 20-25% of all grades, B’s were 22-31% of all grades. • In our high schools, A’s given ranged from 32-43% of all grades, B’s were 28-32% of all grades. • At Fairfax’s Thomas Jefferson School for Science and Technology, on 16 out of 432 seniors in 2007 graduated with all A’s. TJ produced 158 semifinalists in National Merit, and had the highest SAT score in the country. • Grade inflation: debated since 1894 in a Harvard study. • Princeton in 2004 adopted a grade deflation policy, including quotas for A’s.

  9. Grade Distibution Comparison Roanoke County, Virginia Similar Divisions in Virginia

  10. How does weighting affect GPA? • The reason that GPA’s are so variable is the weighting. • Virginia requires that schools weight Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate courses. Here again, Virginia does not mandate consistency. • We weight AP, dual and certain specialty school courses. • That means that our highest GPA’s are in the 4.2-4.3 range, with 4.0 being a perfect “A”. • Systems that weight other course levels, like honors or college-bound, might come up with a higher GPA. • School profiles are sent with each transcript to explain our method.

  11. Does the grading scale hurt students in college acceptance/scholarships? • Divisions vary in grading scales, weighting. • Around Richmond, 5.0+ not uncommon. • In one school in New Jersey, 7.0+ are routinely seen. • “Grades have long been contentious in education because they are so subjective. Grading scales vary widely among K-12 school systems -- and often within schools -- making it increasingly difficult to accurately compare grades.” Strauss, Valerie. “So many grading scales”, Washington Post Sept. 26, 2006, http://www.washingtonpost. com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/25/AR20 06092500999.html

  12. College admissions offices are sophisticated enough to factor in the difference Comparing to previous students Local comparisons based on rank Rigor of courses. Refiguring the GPA How are students from different grading scales compared by colleges?

  13. How would we decide? What is fair? • Do objective research. • Determine the elements that are important: our reputation, our expectations, our current success, talk with college admissions directors. • Get input from our students, parents, teachers, administrators • Anticipate ramifications: student achievement, SOL performance, graduation rate.

More Related