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.
 
What's going to happen:
Alright, I'm MATI.
>Theoretically non-retarded girl "graduates" highschool while being unable to read
>Cut in part about trump saying "the department of education is a big con job
>"expert" they got from the "literacy center" is worried that if trump cuts the department of education a "critical guardrail will be lost"

The fucking gaul of these retarded niggers. Why should be listen to sometime from the LITERACY CENTER when schools are passing people who ARE NOT LITERATE. Clearly the department of education as this so-called "literacy center" are comically incompetent (almost as if they are some kind of con job). Why would we listen to advice from people are literally demonstrably not capable of doing the thing we want to do?

ETA:

Chirp! :story:
 
Why would we listen to advice from people are literally demonstrably not capable of doing the thing we want to do?
No one wants to admit that education has been running without guardrails or brakes for decades. Many will point at second Bush's No Child Left Behind Act, but the poison was already in before that. The main problem being, thanks to Civil Rights, we can't punish or separate the darker or illegal students, even if they drag the average down.

"They're just as capable and eager to learn," as the school installs metal detectors at every entry point. "They'll be accomplished and ready to take on the world" as California requires every new teacher to ESL and puts a translator in every fucking classroom. The LeBron James school in Ohio had kids test lower than a legitimate school for retards. Schools in the deep south have grading parties where teachers have pizza while they fudge numbers. California, the "highly educated" fart huffing center now has a lower literacy rate than places like Mississippi that they see as cousin fucking redneck ville. But it's not the idiot fucking illegals or mush-mouthed jivin' darkies, the schools just need more support...
 
Welp, if the High School Diploma wasn't already worthless, now its complete toilet paper. If incompetence like this is normalized in Commiefornia the eventual people who'd be valued are ones that got properly homeschooled or have some kind accreditation that separates them from the wheat and the chaff.

California's elites only care about nigger worship and brown people worship with an exemption for Palestine because the Californian Jew lobby told Newsom to edit that out, before passing a new curriculum mandating bullshit to be taught.
 
LeBron James school
Suddenly that explains this retarded book existing.


Summary: A whole lot of self-affirming shit.

California's elites only care about nigger worship and brown people worship with an exemption for Palestine because the Californian Jew lobby told Newsom to edit that out, before passing a new curriculum mandating bullshit to be taught.
And said elites will conveniently carpetbag when the state gets turbo fucked big time. They already cried out when LA burned. After the next major disaster akin to the burning of LA but times a hundred... they're gonna flee their sinking ship and its gonna be the New Detroit.

Los Angeles Red Sun.webp
 
Papering over black people's failures is reaching levels never before thought possible.
Schools like this may as well merge with Amazon or some other trillion dollar company and just teach the retards in the back of the room how to sort things in the back room and operate the forklift. That would be better than just passing them along or trying to teach what cannot be taught.
Might as well as go back to the pre-Civil Rights era standard of not expecting kids to stay in school past eighth grade. Underperforming kids learn nothing in high school, their test scores don't improve on a single subject in four years. The only purpose of high school for them is to delay their inevitable incarceration.
 
This is something going on in every western country that is happening systemically; any amount of protest from teachers or even the schools themselves will do nothing.
This is one of the many reasons Peter Bogosian says the entire system needs to be "burned down." There's no saving it.
 
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