1 / 9

Standards Based Grading

This informative guide outlines the standards-based grading system, including major and minor grades, re-do assignments, Aeries gradebook usage, and grading criteria. It emphasizes fair assessment practices and opportunities for students to excel. Clear explanations provided on grading rubrics and expectations for notebooks. Enhance your understanding of how grades reflect student learning!

mdavidson
Download Presentation

Standards Based Grading

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Standards Based Grading Information for Parents and Students

  2. Standards Based Grading Grading will represent what students know. To make sure grades are accurate and reflect student learning, there will be two categories in the aeries gradebook: Major Grades (Summative; Tests, quizzes, assignments and projects designed to demonstrate what students have learned) ……………………….……………………………………………………..…………………………...60% Minor Grades (Formative; Assignments designed to show the process of learning including notebooks and practice work)…………………………………….…………………………………………………………….40%

  3. Standards Based Grading • With SBG, grades will communicate how much of the content students are understanding. • Non-Academic factors will not be graded unless it is essential to a specific skill (i.e. organization of the science notebook).

  4. Students may Re-do assignments • Students will be able to redo assignments not meeting standards or turn in late work without penalty. • All assignments that receive a score lower than a 10 can be redone and turned in for an improved score. • There is a cut off point for turning in missing, late or redo assignments • The cut off is when we start new units. For example: if we are on Unit 2 a student cannot turn in assignments from Unit 1. • For a notebook check, students are given 1 week after notebooks are returned to resubmit.

  5. Aeries • Please note, missing/late assignments will be in the gradebook as a “5”, as this is the lowest score that can be received. Therefore, aeries will not note any missing assignments. • Scores will not be any lower than 50% because there will be no zero’s in the gradebook. • Zero’s are mathematically inaccurate with an A-F grading system where each grade represents 10%. • Ex: A= 100-90, B= 89-80…F= 59-0… • Each grade letter represents 10%, so why does an F traditionally represent 50%? It gets students into a hole that is too difficult to get out of. • If students receive a zero for a missing assignment, it essentially punishes them 6 times more than it needs to. • If grades tell us what a student knows, 1 missing assignments should not devastate a students’ grade.

  6. Work for the “A” • Students who routinely receive “A’s” but are not challenged are not truly showing what they are capable of. • Students that routinely turn in high quality work that shows deeper understanding should receive a higher grade than a student that has turned in the bare minimum. • To receive an “A” the student must show understanding that exceedswhat was taught in class. Grades should be utilized as feedback that the student can use to self-assess and improve learning. • Allowing students to take more time if needed and allowing them to resubmit assignments gives students every opportunity to achieve an “A”…but they have to work for it!

  7. Neatness, organization, etc. • While neatness, organization, creativity and turning in an assignment in a timely manner will be important on an assignment, these factors will not help a student’s grade if he or she does not understand the material. • If a student(s) is not finishing work in a timely manner or completing assignments, we will address it together and again points will not be taken off an assignment.

  8. General Grading Rubric This rubric is used for most assignments. The expectations of each assignment are discussed with students prior to being completed.

  9. Notebook Grading Rubic • For notebook checks only! 10 9.5 9 8.5 8 7.5 7 6.5 6 5

More Related