Disaster San Francisco Public Schools Convert F's to C's, B's to A's in Equity Push - [S]tudents can earn an A with a score as low as 80 percent and pass with a D at just 21 percent.

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San Francisco's public high schools will implement a sweeping change to their grading system this fall, replacing traditional methods with a policy that allows students to pass with scores as low as 41 percent.

The initiative, part of a broader "Grading for Equity" push, is stirring concern among educators, students and parents over academic standards and college readiness.

The Context
Similar policies across other Bay Area districts—such as Dublin, Oakland and Pleasanton—have seen mixed results and strong community reactions. Dublin Unified attempted a pilot of equity grading in 2023, which included removing zeros for missed assignments and awarding a minimum of 50 percent for any "reasonably attempted" work.

That pilot, however, was met with outrage and resistance. Parents created petitions, formed WhatsApp groups and filled school board meetings to protest what they saw as a lowering of standards for their children. The Dublin school board eventually suspended the initiative, though individual teachers were still allowed to use the methods at their discretion.

The experiment in San Francisco comes amid — or despite — a broader rethinking of DEI initiatives after the election of Donald Trump, who ran on a platform of excising what he and many others said were "unfair" equity practices in the government and private sectors.

What To Know
Superintendent Maria Su's plan in San Francisco was not subject to a public vote by the Board of Education, drawing criticism for lack of transparency. The new policy, set to affect more than 10,000 students across 14 high schools, significantly changes how academic performance is measured.

Homework and classroom participation will no longer influence a student's final grade. Students will be assessed primarily on a final exam, which they can retake multiple times. Attendance and punctuality will not affect academic standing.

The plan was first revealed in the fine print of a 25-page agenda and reported by The Voice of San Francisco, a local nonprofit. The outlet reported that the district is hiring Joe Feldman, an educational consultant known for his book Grading for Equity, to train teachers this summer.

"If our grading practices don't change, the achievement and opportunity gaps will remain for our most vulnerable students. If we are truly dedicated to equity, we have to stop avoiding the sensitive issue of grading and embrace it," Feldman said in a 2019 blog post for the School Superintendents Association (AASA).

Feldman's book outlines how traditional grading can reinforce socioeconomic disparities and proposes alternative strategies for more equitable assessment. According to The Voice of San Francisco, the new system will be modeled in part on the San Leandro Unified School District, where students can earn an A with a score as low as 80 percent and pass with a D at just 21 percent. Under the forthcoming San Francisco policy, a score of 41 percent will qualify as a C.

Reactions Split
Supporters of the policy say it better reflects real student learning by de-emphasizing behavior-based penalties like late work or missed assignments. However, critics warn the policy could harm students who are already on track for college placement.
"Nowhere in college do you get 50 percent for doing nothing," said Laurie Sargent, an eighth-grade English teacher in the Dublin Unified School District, in a 2024 Mercury News report. "Nowhere in the working world do you get 50 percent for doing nothing. If I don't show up to work, they don't pay me 50 percent of my salary—even if I made a reasonable attempt to get there."

The change comes amid ongoing financial strain and declining enrollment across the district. While intended to address achievement gaps, critics argue the policy may only obscure the underlying academic challenges rather than solve them.

Such a drastic and dramatic change in the high school grading system merits greater attention and scrutiny than the school district has given it so far," wrote John Trasviña, former dean of the University of San Francisco School of Law, in an op-ed for The Voice of San Francisco.

Parents in San Francisco also have expressed frustration over being left out of the decision-making process. The school district's Office of Equity has not updated its public materials in nearly three years, and no broad outreach appears to have been conducted ahead of the rollout.

What People Are Saying
Katherine Hermens, a biology teacher at Dublin High School, told EdSurge in 2023: "It is time to emphasize learning over effort. Prioritizing learning is exactly what equitable grading does. It recognizes the individual journey of every student and acknowledges that we all learn differently—at our own pace and in various ways."

John Trasviña, former dean of the University of San Francisco School of Law, wrote in an op-ed: "Grading for Equity de-emphasizes the importance of timely performance, assignment completion, and consistent attendance."

What Happens Next
School board members in San Francisco were reportedly not given a formal vote on this policy, triggering internal governance disputes. If there is enough public pressure, the Board of Education may seek to review or override the superintendent's decision, though there is no suggestion as of yet that such a move is imminent.
 
Feldman's book outlines how traditional grading can reinforce socioeconomic disparities and proposes alternative strategies for more equitable assessment.
This is backward, as expected of faggots. Getting graded on attendance and homework is what uplifts the socioeconomincally disadvantaged. Leaving them to study by themselves and grading the final result wil fuck them up.

If incompetence like this is normalized in Commiefornia
Get raped, solzhenitsyn.
 
It's all so tiresome. They don't have to try, so many kids won't. Then we wonder why so many people have no critical thinking skills, no reading comprehension, no discipline, etc.

Combine that with neglectful parenting and well, you get the idea. Just grim stuff.
That's a feature, not a bug. The elites don't want you to think. Just nod and trust your betters.
 
These people who want their children to pass with Fs are the same people who will complain about their hamburger not having onions or the cashier not being able to figure out how to make change or the clerk being too lazy to go in the back and see if they have a different size shoe.

If we let the kids get by without doing any work, how can we expect them to act any different when they enter the workforce?1
 
Besides the multiple retakes, I actually agree with this. We already educate students on passing a standardized test standard. Why does homework matter if the student passes the mandatory standardized test at the end? What are the chances a student who doesn't do the homework will pass the test? If they do, good. This rule was a benefit. If not, well that was the outcome expected, wasn't it?
Attendance and timeliness are critical life skills that can only be formed by habit. If we fail to teach children to show up at the designated place and time having done the tasks expected of them, we won’t have a civilization before long. He who lacks the discipline to perform unpleasant but necessary tasks in a timely manner will soon learn what it means to go without anything. Society can confiscate from others to prevent this for a time but there is no escaping the inevitable: the total failure of our civilization.
 
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They are setting up these kids for disaster. Assuming any of these kids go to college (in any normal college-if there are any left) they'll just fail out. What a horrendously retarded thing to do. Unfuckingbelievable
Colleges haven't been that prestigious in over a decade, in my opinion. If I could graduate then they haven't been gatekeeping hard enough.
 
The Asian overachiever domination complex really has gotten into their pea brains.

This is gonna set off another recall election on the SFSB.
I don’t know the voter base of SF that well, will the voting public object on a meaningful scale? My gut says no because they voted the current niggers in.
 
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Attendance and timeliness are critical life skills that can only be formed by habit. If we fail to teach children to show up at the designated place and time having done the tasks expected of them, we won’t have a civilization before long. He who lacks the discipline to perform unpleasant but necessary tasks in a timely manner will soon learn what it means to go without anything. Society can confiscate from others to prevent this for a time but there is no escaping the inevitable: the total failure of our civilization.
Not really, any parent who cares is already leaving the public schools, creating a positive feedback loop that leaves the niggers of all colors.
 
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