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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Personally, about all I got out of four years of high school was learning how to cook, how to drive, and a little French. Am sure there was homework but sure don't remember any of it now. Suggest only reason high school isn't two years long is that employers/colleges/military cannot handle large numbers of 16-year-olds.

My real education started in college, learned a lot.

During Korean language school had homework most nights, usually a couple of hours studying vocabulary and grammar. You put the time in or you flunked out, to go off and be an infantryman, runway buffer, paint chipper on a ship, etc. Attrition was high.

Had some homework at the university, much of it writing papers, both at the undergraduate and graduate levels.

Homework should reinforce what was taught in the classroom, and/or prepare the student for upcoming classwork. Also a good way to learn time management. In the real world, time management is most important. Bosses won't tolerate bullshit excuses why the work isn't done. Many of these "students" will have a very harsh lesson coming.
 
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
I dont know how education works in bong land.

In burger land schools are very very local, as in part of the local goverment. I know people who work in the school system and for my shit hole community its dysfunctional for alot of reasons. People build fiefdoms, politicking etc.

The case with the tranny raping that women in the bathroom was not a top down thing. It was result of people who failed to get into higher levels of goverment so they went to the school district.

The name of game is funding as in have kids in seats and collect the state and fed money. Personally I would love to see what happens if we stopped all the testing and just funded the school systems and let them manage it themselves for good or bad.

Now to add alittle color to all this. In my hometown there is a private catholic school, and one high school that out ranks everybody.

That one private school is high ranking because the parents of the students are doctors, lawyers, engineers, and INVOLVED in the school and in their kids lives.

The dumbing down of americac is the result of not wanting children to fail and thus lowering the bar remember if a kid drops out equal less funding.
 
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As polarizing as the name "equitable grading" sounds, once you sift through all the newspeak, the system being described sounds a lot like what you'd expect in a large-lecture college course.

The first day of Organic Chem 201, you get a syllabus that lists the topics covered, suggested textbook problems for each, and the dates of the exams. Attend as many of the lectures and do as many of the practice problems as you feel are appropriate; your performance on the exams is the only factor affecting your grade.

With that said, I do not believe that high schoolers and middle schoolers are ready for this kind of responsibility. I also believe that while teachers who support "equitable grading" will go on and on about muh disadvantaged students, the real reason they're backing this is that less homework for students means less homework for teachers.
I do think this is an active response to the awful results the current educational system is seeing, but I think they've gotten to them in a unique way. I don't think this is about the workload on teachers, I don't think this is about the success or failures of young boys in schools, and I don't think this is about trying to pad ghetto kids up to some fake font of success.

I think this has to do with the fact that school boards and teachers have been stripped of literally all their authority and incentive structures to, for lack of a better term, force these kids to learn this shit. There's basically no ability to discipline a student for any reason, up to and including assaulting the teachers - Detention doesn't work when the students just go home anyway and if their parents don't care, not like you can lay a hand on them. Punitive grade point reductions just get the board breathing down your ass for making bad results look even worse. The only thing you can hold students accountable for are the mandated tests, which outside of perhaps allowing flexible dates for scheduling, are completely out of a teachers hands to influence or control. Since we've long since dropped any expectation of holding a parent partially responsible for the actions or lack their of for their child, that just leaves the student solely responsible for their outcomes.

Primary Education as a whole functionally degraded to "Lecture the material and hope for the best", this just puts what was being done into formal practice. They've painted it up with oppression whining, but its just cover for admitting how powerless they are in the whole dynamic.
 
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