Our Services

Get 15% Discount on your First Order

[rank_math_breadcrumb]

Teachers Values

Kindly help me complete the attached assignment on grading tips.



Teachers certification course


C12 – Grading Tips

The standard-based system for the past 20 years has been the educator’s mapping manual of how we align our learning expectations for children in every grade and every content area in our school system. It has been a massive undertaking by Federal and State departments, districts, schools, leaders, teachers, and expert advisors to put forth a pathway of clear student outcomes of learning. The de-construction of a standard and defining what it means to score in three to five sections using terms such as exemplary/outstanding, proficient/ met expectations, partially proficient/approaching, or below/improvement required in understanding the standards’ level of attainment across many of America’s school systems.

The classroom preparation of our students is like a coach’s preparation for a typical in-season college football week. Watching our favorite gridiron team perform on Saturday is the climax of the coaches and players’ intense week of work and preparation getting the team ready for the big game on Saturday. In our classrooms, we have our game plan (lesson plan) ready to implement at the start of each week. Just like the players, our team of students practices for the game’s performance of the unit material at the direction of the teacher through desired strategies needed to be successful on game (assessment) day.

One big difference in the football game is that everyone knows that a field goal is worth 3 pts and a touchdown is 6 points.  A touchdown represents exemplary success and a field goal is a partial success. A punt or turnover does not meet the team’s expectations of expected performance just like a D or F does not meet the expectations in the classroom. When the game is over you add the points and there is no confusion about the outcome. The points speak clearly to the outcome results.

Unfortunately, that is not the case in the use of our classroom points and grades as outcome predictors of success if we use the traditional scale. Numbers are not always as reliable. We have convoluted the monitoring process to be frustrating, unreliable, and not sure what it actually does measure in too many classrooms.

Currently, the two most common grading schemes are the traditional 100-point scale and the 5-point scale.

1.  A 100-point scale (0-100) with 10-point ranges to define the following:

A-90-100         Excellent

B-80-89           Above-average 

C-70-79           Average 

D-60-69          Below-average

F-0-59             Failure   (note:  You can see we have 59 failure points and 41 passing points. Any guess why this is the case?)

2.  A 0-4 Point scale (5-point scale) most commonly found in standard-based assessments

4-Outstanding

3-Above Average

2-Average

1-Below Average

0-No evidence of any understanding 

As you enter the classroom, it will be important that you visit with your mentor teacher or department head and have a thorough understanding of grades / grading / and reporting expectations.  Many districts will provide you with an expectation of the 
number and types of grades that are expected during a reporting period.  Keeping up with your grading to be prepared for regular progress reporting is essential; and with parents having access to parent grading portals, they expect you to stay current with grading and reporting.  

The most basic error in teacher grade books and report cards is found in the use of percent and points interchangeably for assessment grades. A teachers’ report card may have the following data for two assignments this week or multiple scores that are identical rating performances with one zero for each, but different scales being used.

 

Points used for
Grade

Percent used for Grade

Daily assignment 1

5/10

50

Daily assignment 1

20/20

100

Average

25/30=83%

75%

Grade

B

C

Another common error is to use both the 0-100 point scale and the 0-4 point scale interchangeably in a classroom.

Which grade does the child receive (B or a C) in each of these scenarios? Why? How do you know which one is better or more accurate than the other?

The most fundamental level questions we can ask, “are the practices we are using currently in many classrooms accurate or misrepresenting learning, and why?”
Recognizing we have to take assessment reliability seriously to avoid the mentioned example should be part of a normal preparation practice in education.

Errors from students are presented in such ways as lack of motivation, too tired to think, guessing, lack of concentration, attitude, and simple memory lapses are just a few examples.

A test can also have errors simply by such examples as confusing directions; the test was too long to complete in the allotted time, or too many questions in one area or not enough questions in other skills that reflect the sample of skills expected to be monitored in the standard(s).

The teacher can create errors in such ways as scoring and rating practices that are unreliable as pointed out above and statistically unable to support the score given to the student; item difficulty; item discrimination; and practice such as weighting methods of assessment unfairly and giving extra credit for non-academic purposes.

In the sample below you can see aligning weighted value to expectations of concepts versus weight to a method of assessment. If your assessments are made up of percent of value as aligned to the expectations of Texas Standards then the weight should be toward the skill (i.e. place value) not the method of assessment (tests and quizzes…). A big mistake in using the current weighted system of assessments is you may have a test worth 50 percent and quizzes worth 20 percent of a child’s grade The error is when the test is 100 points and the quiz is 20 points. A weight is pre-defined by the points you gave it and in this case, the test is five times more important than the quiz (100 compared to 20 points). When you add the weight of 50% (test) to 20% (quiz) it becomes another 2.5 times more important on top of the 5 times you already started with per the points you gave it. See how this skews your data and accuracy of assessing learning?

 

1. On the report card, does the grade truly reflect the student’s ability as measured against a standard in that particular subject and not a “responsibility” grade?

2. Finally, think seriously about grades such as 69, 79, & 89, in the assessments, you have designed. Are they perfect enough to measure that precisely? I doubt it. I have never seen a 100 point descriptor to date in my career of every point on the 100-point scale.  The student probably knows enough about the topic to earn the extra point, but you might not have asked. I like to ask the teacher that gives the B for the 89 to tell me the learning difference in the 89 vs 90. I usually get something like, “we have to have a cut-off somewhere.” That is true, but you have to be able to show the learning cut-off, not the number cut-off, as it is inaccurate in the scale.

Write down your thoughts on this information and defend why you have chosen the grades you did in the text box below.

image1.png

image2.png

image3.jpeg

image4.png

image5.jpeg

Share This Post

Email
WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Reddit

Order a Similar Paper and get 15% Discount on your First Order

Related Questions

Social Science – Sociology Assignment

Please see attached files  1 SMART Goal Development for MSW Core Competencies Name: Institution: Date: An essential strategy in social work to make abstract concepts real, functional, and palpable is the setting of goals using the SMART technique. The SMART framework means that these are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and

Social Science – Sociology Assignment 3

Please see attached file Safety plans and policies protect both the social worker and the client. They reflect the profession’s ethical values, but they also are critical for maintaining productive professional behaviors. And, like many aspects of the profession, they demonstrate an ability to actively reflect on your evolving practice.

labor dec 13

Exam #4 Labor 120 – Fall 2024 Striffler Drawing from our readings and films, answer all of the following questions (in about 2-3 paragraphs per answer). Do not draw from sources outside the class. The exam should be submitted by 11:59 pm on Monday (12/16) via Blackboard. 1) Drawing on

Discussion

What are your thoughts on creating a treatment plan for the child or adolescent client you created for the Week 9 assignment (and his or her family, if applicable)? How would you compare and contrast the theories you selected to address the cases enhanced your knowledge of these theories as

Philosophy Final

Philosophy Final: Essay Question / Prompt You are defending someone accused of robbing a bank.  It’s already been shown that they committed the robbery – your client confessed, and the confession is backed up by footage from a security camera.  In short, there’s no doubt they did it.  Your goal

Social Science assignment 3

  Submit a 2-**** reflection on the Myths and Facts activity. In your reflection:   Identify at least one myth that you had previously believed to be true. Is it challenging for you to now accept the true information, and why?  Describe the information on which you based your answers

Ant 9

Need a question concerning this week‘s material And  respond to question below. Why is the male/female dichotomy problematic?

Discussion: What is the Anthropocene?

  Discussion: What is the Anthropocene? Discussion: What is the Anthropocene? For this week’s discussion, please answer the prompt below from this week’s chapter reading. You must answer each part of the prompt using your resources for support (your textbook) with proper  APA style citations and references. If you need any

db

First assignment 2000 Final Research Paper (writing assignment) – 30 points The final research paper should address an administrative issue in policing, courts, corrections, or probation/parole. Follow the required outline for the final research paper: 1.  Introduction – what is the theory or thesis and what is the importance of this

Social Science – Sociology Assignment

Please see attached files Goals are more than a list, and setting goals is an intentional process. But how do you move from an abstract concept to something more concrete? Consider the concept of SMART goals. SMART is an acronym for specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. SMART goals guide

Emic-Etic Dec 6 2024

Emic-Etic Assignment 8.    Emic-Etic documents are two-part assignments – Please do both parts back-to-back to fully experience the difference between a song you know well (emic) and one you’re unfamiliar with (etic). For Part 1 (Emic) DO NOT use a song that comes up randomly in a playlist –

need checklist template filled out

PHIL347 Course Project: Topic Selection 1. My argument will provide reasons related to the following question: Should puberty blockers, hormone therapy, and gender reassignment surgery be available to minors? (Argument can address each treatment separately; that is, argument can claim puberty blockers are okay but not gender reassignment therapy) For

DP

You will be choosing 2 questions from the exam question’s list. You can only choose one question per section (eg, you cannot choose two questions from section 1). Yes, this means there will be sections you will not choose a question from. You will write anywhere from 2-4 paragraphs for each question you

Ant 8

Need a question concerning this week‘s material And  respond to question below.   Would it be impossible, or just extremely difficult, to live in an industrialized market economy without being a consumer, that is, not relying on any goods and services provided by others? Is complete self-sufficiency possible?

Stress

Stress Reduction Experiential Activity and Assignment We learned about stress, crisis, and coping all semester and now is the time to put our knowledge to use.  For this assignment you will pick a stress reduction activity described in class, our textbook and/or the peer reviewed literature.  This stress reduction activity