Schools Are Ditching Homework, Deadlines in Favor of 'Equitable Grading'

Las Vegas high-school English teacher Laura Jeanne Penrod initially thought the grading changes at her school district made sense. Under the overhaul, students are given more chances to prove they have mastered a subject without being held to arbitrary deadlines, in recognition of challenges some children have outside school.

Soon after the system was introduced, however, Ms. Penrod said her 11th-grade honors students realized the new rules minimized the importance of homework to their final grades, leading many to forgo the brainstorming and rough drafts required ahead of writing a persuasive essay. Some didn’t turn in the essay at all, knowing they could redo it later.

“They’re relying on children having intrinsic motivation, and that is the furthest thing from the truth for this age group,” said Ms. Penrod, a teacher for 17 years.

The Clark County School District where Ms. Penrod works—the nation’s fifth-largest school system—has joined dozens of districts in California, Iowa, Virginia and other states in moves toward “equitable grading” with varying degrees of buy-in. Leaders in the 305,000-student Clark County district said the new approach was about making grades a more accurate reflection of a student’s progress and giving opportunities to all learners.

Equitable grading can take different forms, but the systems aim to measure whether a student knows the classroom material by the end of a term without penalties for behavior, which, under the theory, can introduce bias. Homework is typically played down and students are given multiple opportunities to complete tests and assignments.

Proponents of the approach, including paid consultants, say it benefits students with after-school responsibilities, such as a job or caring for siblings, as well as those with learning disabilities. Traditional grading methods, they say, favor those with a stable home life and more hands-on parents.

“We’re giving children hope and the opportunity to learn right up until [the class is] officially over,” said Michael Rinaldi, the principal at Westhill High School in Stamford, Conn., where a group of teachers began exploring different grading systems four years ago.

In Las Vegas, some teachers and students say the changes have led to gaming the system and a lack of accountability.

“If you go to a job in real life, you can’t pick and choose what tasks you want to do and only do the quote big ones,” said Alyson Henderson, a high-school English teacher there. Lessons drag on now, she said, because students can turn in work until right before grades are due.

“We’re really setting students up for a false sense of reality,” Ms. Henderson said.

Equitable grading still typically awards As through Fs, but the criteria are overhauled. Homework, in-class discussions and other practice work, called formative assessments, are weighted at between 10% and 30%. The bulk of a grade is earned through what are known as summative assessments, such as tests or essays.

Extra credit is banned—no more points for bringing in school supplies—as is grading for behavior, which includes habits such as attendance.

The scale starts at 49% or 50% rather than zero, meant to keep a student’s grade from sinking so low from a few missed assignments that they feel they can’t recover and give up.

Samuel Hwang, a senior at Ed W. Clark High School in Las Vegas, has spoken out against the grading changes, saying they provide incentives for poor work habits. A straight-A student headed to the University of Chicago next year, Samuel said even classmates in honors and Advanced Placement classes are prone to skip class now unless there is an exam.

“There’s an apathy that pervades the entire classroom,” he said.

Clark County Superintendent Jesus Jara told the school board last fall that successfully shifting the system will take years, as the district’s 18,000 teachers shed the traditional grading mind-set.

Erin Spata, a science teacher at Westhill High in Connecticut who favors the change, said her students are moving away from constantly asking how many points an assignment will be worth and instead understand the importance of practice work, whether or not it is counted toward the final grade.

Many districts using equitable grading are being trained by Joe Feldman, an Oakland, Calif.-based former teacher and administrator who wrote a 2018 book on grading for equity. The book’s concepts build on research into mastery- or standards-based learning.

Albuquerque Public Schools last year signed a $687,500 contract for Mr. Feldman’s Crescendo Education Group to help support 200 teachers in a two-year pilot.

Bias can come into play when teachers use a grade as an incentive for behavior, said Tanya Kuhnee, a teacher-support specialist who is helping implement the Albuquerque program. Maybe a student is late because they had to bring their sibling to school. “That has nothing to do with whether they can write a competent, argumentative essay,” Ms. Kuhnee said.

Mr. Feldman said he had worked with around 50 public-school districts since 2013, including those in Chicago, Los Angeles and New York City, and smaller districts throughout California, Minnesota and elsewhere. Interest grew during the pandemic, he said.

“Classrooms are pressure cookers,” he said. With daily deadlines, cheating off classmates can be ubiquitous. “They’re now able to relax, say, ‘I can have a bad day,’ and spend more time on things. It changes the way the classroom feels.”

A prepandemic study by Crescendo Group showed a decrease in Ds and Fs under equitable grading—and a decrease in the number of As awarded.

Clark County said in the first year of the change, fewer students across racial demographics received an F.

Sarah Lloyd, a middle-school science teacher in Los Angeles, has spent two years studying equitable grading and is still working on the right balance between giving students space to be self-paced and keeping her science lessons moving. “You have to teach differently,” she said. Her students are starting to “value learning more than points” and have less test anxiety, she said.

Ms. Lloyd said she understood why teachers push back against mandated grading changes.

“I think that it is easier to convert people incrementally,” Ms. Lloyd said. “It’s not something you can shift all at once.”


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I thought this was going to be about niggers or some shit but this is all reasonable. Homework is usually pointless busy work that has not been shown to benefit students in any real way. Being able to show you actually understand the material and aren't getting punished because you have a life outside school is fair. Why punish an intelligent student who was late for personal reasons? it's legalism and not how the real world really works anyway.
 
I swaer to god they are making HS and lower education garbage on purporse to force people into remedile classes if/when they hit college.
Then again the average teachers at those levels range from mildly competent to complete retards anyway. I can't imagine that would not be worse then when I attended, considering the politics now. It could be that the talent to even teach anything remotely advanced isn't there. If anything we should be raising standards, not implmenting systems that let students fall behind. So much of the bullshit this "fixes" could simply be solved by just letting to exceptions to the rules be exceptions.
 
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So, this is a whole lot of colorful language to hide what they're really doing.

Homework matters less? Tests are more important?

Guess what that favors? Boys.

Girls do better when there is less weight placed on a high pressure test, and more weight placed on predictable things like homework and extra credit. Boys do better when they don't have to worry about busy work and can just learn the subject and put it back out in a test form.

Combine that with less concern about absences, and you have the makings of what appears to be an intentional shift towards making the grade school experience better for young men. This is likely completely intentional because colleges are so heavily female now that even the girls are complaining.

They know they have no way to appeal to anyone on the left about correcting gender bias against boys, so they focus on how it benefits niggers.

But I'm all in favor of this. Fewer As? Good. As were expected. They were seen as the default. Absolutely not, only exceptional students should get As, and only for exceptional work. If you get a C at school, that means you're average, and most people should expect to be average, especially women.
 
I'm sure college professors are going to have fun once these students get to post-secondary.
They're already dumbing down college and uni work to account for students like these. Remedial classes are commonplace now across math, science, and English for example, and if those aren't enough profs and contract teachers are then heavily encouraged to lower standards enough to keep bums in seats and tuition revenue flowing. The switch to online only for 2020-2022 only intensified this trend.

It's going to be a long and painful process rectifying this situation once the collective willpower for it finally emerges.
 
Guess pulling out your kids from school isn't going to be localized in California. It may be nationwide at this point considering the level of retardation coming from the top.

Stunting your kid's development on purpose is how you wind up with lolcows. The US is literally churning out lolcows en masse. If the common Amerimutt starts acting like Chris, would there be an America section to watch the retardation?
 
Or.
You could give material/tests/ etc. That actually touch upon the fucking topics you were conversing about in class.

What the fuck is the point of class if it's going to be 1/2 hours of retarded bullshit, while the test is on something else entirely different? What kind of dumb faggot taught these teachers TO TEACH THE WRONG FUCKING THING?

Like you think that's going to foster "studious thinking" or whatever dumbshit excuse that was?
It's going to foster "man everything they're saying is useless! Why even pay attention" thinking.
 
I think it was just the reality of teaching jobs having to take students work home to mark it.
Having been related to multiple teachers, I can say this is 100% true, and is exactly as effective as homework is for students. This was a major contributory factor to the inefficacy of teaching over zoom (at least on the teachers end), and teachers need to learn that their ability to take work home was an unintended privilege and they would be better off just staying late to finish their work just like everybody else.
 
Intelligent students learn that their grandmother can die many times.
based students. yeah who cares. arbitrarily punishing people for not FOLLOWIN DA RULEZ is retarded. if anything this is how real life actually works
 
“Classrooms are pressure cookers,” he said. With daily deadlines, cheating off classmates can be ubiquitous. “They’re now able to relax, say, ‘I can have a bad day,’ and spend more time on things. It changes the way the classroom feels.”
From my experience, the only thing I got out of public school was learning how to handle deadlines and pressure (not that anything was particularly hard). You learn how to deal with stress and that's about the only thing that high-stakes testing was good at. If you take that away then what's the fucking point of going to school at all. These kids are going to grow up and be the head surgeon in charge of operating on you when you get older, god fucking help us all.

Grade people on their skin color and economic background.

poor black = AA
middle class white = F
upper class anything = AAA
It's not about 'equality', it's about 'equity'. If we pass the minorities while failing the majority because they had the audacity of being white and middle class then we'll have an equal society right? Right??? Spot on with the rich people though, they'll never let their kids languish in public schools and I can't say I blame them.
 
Am I misunderstanding something or are they now just giving them a chunk of their grade already?
You're getting it absolutely right. These retards shouldn't be afraid of failure because failure is the best teacher. I don't know a job on earth that will tolerate people not getting their work done or getting there on time.
 
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This isn’t a bug it’s deliberate. The government does not want educated, erudite students. They do not want students who are motivated, or able, or dedicated, or resilient. Because they turn into motivated educated honest adults with a stake in rhe future. Who can unseat governments
Everyone will be dumbed down jnto one brown homogenous mass. They will not have cursive so they can’t read pesky historical documents. They will not understand the more archaic English forms so they can’t read older works. They will not be able to research. They will not be able to present a cogent argument, or be eloquent. Those people can rally crowds. They’re dangerous too.
No, thet will have you stupid, poor and semi illiterate. And once the west is stupid and dumb and illiterate someone else will take over and you won’t like what they do.
Not to mention the degradation of infrastructure and invention and safety when everyone’s a stupid brown blob person
 
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