1 / 16

Standards Based Grading: A New Outlook on Grading

Standards Based Grading: A New Outlook on Grading. “Why…would anyone want to change current grading practices?”. “The answer is quite simple: grades are so imprecise that they are almost meaningless.” --Robert Marzano. Traditional Grading. Letter grades-A, B, C, D, F

katiev
Télécharger la présentation

Standards Based Grading: A New Outlook on Grading

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. Standards Based Grading: A New Outlook on Grading

  2. “Why…would anyone want to change current grading practices?” “The answer is quite simple: grades are so imprecise that they are almost meaningless.” --Robert Marzano

  3. Traditional Grading • Letter grades-A, B, C, D, F • Academic achievement tainted by non-academic factors • Grade everything and average it together • Chronological listing of all the assignments • Report a single grade for a class

  4. Practices that Inhibit Learning • Including behaviors in academic grade • Assessments not linked to learning targets • Grading first effort (formative assessment) • Assigning Zeros as grades (The Power of Zero) • Always using the average to determine a grade • Old and recent scores are given the same weight

  5. Grading Problems through a High Ability Lens • If the child is working above grade level and earns a C, is that fair? • How do letter grades affect a child’s self-esteem if a child who has always earned all A’s suddenly isn’t earning them anymore because he or she is now being appropriately challenged in a high ability classroom? • Letter grades encourage perfectionism, or worse, only doing what you need to do the get the A and nothing more.

  6. What is a Learning Standard? …an agreed upon statement of what a student should know and be able to do in a given content area.

  7. STANDARDS BASED GRADING • A focus on mastering content “standards” instead of accumulating points • A report of what students know and are able to do • A balance of formative and summative assessments (body of evidence) • A record keeping system that informs instruction • A system that encourages student reflection and responsibility for learning

  8. Guiding Principle #1 The purpose of a report card is to communicate studentachievement • Based on Common Core State Standards and Indiana Standards • Academic performance only • Behaviors reported separately

  9. Guiding Principle #2 A reporting program should: • Be Fair • Be Consistent • Support Learning • Promote Communication between teachers/students/parents

  10. Guiding Principle #3 Relate assessment procedures to learning goals • Identify critical concepts/skills • Assess individual concepts/skills • Mastery is the standard • Summative vs. Formative activities • Multiple Opportunities to Demonstrate Learning

  11. Real Life Applications • In real-life, attainment of important milestones (SATs, certificates, drivers’ licenses, CPA, bar exam, medical boards, etc.) allows for multiple opportunities with course corrections along the way. • Sports • Raises in the private sector

  12. Alexandria Community School Corporation Standards-Based Report Card 7 C’s of Success in the Global Community: • Content • Communication • Collaboration • Critical Thinking • Creative Thinking • Commitment • Confidence Standards (CCSS and Indiana) 21st Century Skills Affective Domain

  13. Academic Reporting Key 4 – Exceeding Learning Standards Student performance demonstrates an understanding of the knowledge and skills beyond expectations and consistently shows evidence of higher level thinking. 3 – Meeting Learning Standards Student performance demonstrates a thorough understanding of the knowledge and skills expected at this grade level. 2 – Approaching Learning Standards Student performance demonstrates a partial understanding of the knowledge and expected at this grade level. 1 – Not Meeting Learning Standards Student performance does not demonstrate an understanding of the knowledge and skills expected at this grade level. N/A – Standard Not Introduced Yet This School Year

  14. Scoring for the Supporting C’s of Success • Meets Expectations = ME • Improving = IM • Needs Improvement = NI • Not been modeled/taught yet; Not scored= N/A

  15. Assessment Scales for Standards • Based on the CCSS for math and English/language arts • Based on the Indiana Academic Standards for Science and Social Studies • All standards and scales will be posted online as they are completed • https://sites.google.com/site/alexacademicprograms/

  16. Final Thoughts “By comparing one child’s performance to a clear standard, parents, children and teachers all know precisely what is expected. Every time a student attempts a task, the performance is compared to the standard, not to other children’s performances. The most important advantages for children and families are fairness, clarity, and improved learning.” --Doug Reeves (101 Questions and Answers about Standards, Assessment, and Accountability, 2004)

More Related