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Spencer, Kyle – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2012
A growing band of teachers, schools, and entire districts have put their faith in standards-based grading, an innovative, albeit complex and sometimes controversial, method that aims to make grades more meaningful. A standards-based report card contains an overall grade for each course but also indicates how well a student has mastered each of the…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Report Cards, Tests
Guskey, Thomas R.; Jung, Lee Ann – Principal Leadership, 2012
The field of education is moving rapidly toward a standards-based approach to grading. School leaders have become increasingly aware of the tremendous variation that exists in grading practices, even among teachers of the same courses in the same department in the same school. Consequently, students' grades often have little relation to their…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Grades (Scholastic), Class Rank, Grading
Brookhart, Susan M. – Solution Tree, 2011
Grades should reflect and help motivate learning. This book illustrates ways teachers can shift their practices to conduct accurate, constructive assessments that not only maintain the integrity of essential education objectives, but also motivate students and enhance learning. Through detailed strategies, educators will learn how to grade…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Student Evaluation, Grades (Scholastic), Grading
Jung, Lee Ann; Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2010
Teachers often grapple with the challenge of giving report card grades to students with learning disabilities and English language learners. The authors offer a five-step model that "offers a fair, accurate, and legal way to adapt the grading process for exceptional learners." The model begins with a high-quality reporting system for all students…
Descriptors: Report Cards, Student Needs, Grades (Scholastic), Learning Disabilities
Hebel, Sara – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
The latest national report card on higher education, as in the past, handed out a lot of "incompletes." Like the student who keeps forgetting to turn in that lab report, the grades can't be computed without all the data. There's a lot policy makers don't know about their states' higher-education performance, and the gaps in information limit the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research Problems, Academic Achievement, Grades (Scholastic)
Hann, Christopher – District Administration, 2008
This article reports on a controversial program that rewards high student achievement with fast food. When Cathy Griffith, a fourth-grader at Red Bug Elementary School in Seminole County (Florida) Public Schools, made the honor roll last November, she also read a message on her report card sleeve that she was eligible for a prize for her good…
Descriptors: Report Cards, Grades (Scholastic), Food, Child Health
Shedlin, Allan, Jr. – Principal, 1988
Report cards have become so quantitative and narrowly focused that their information potential is rarely realized. Achievement test scores do not reflect creativity, curiosity, perseverance, flexibility, imagination, or true thinking ability--qualities excluded from most report cards. Educators can regain public confidence by rethinking reporting…
Descriptors: Accountability, Elementary Education, Grades (Scholastic), Parent School Relationship

Haley, Beverly – NASSP Bulletin, 1988
Good grades on a report card do not necessarily mean the material has been comprehended. This article examines the relative worth of grades; extra credit assignments; categorizing students into A, B, or C boxes; and the role of parental pressures for higher grades. Grading systems should be subordinate to true learning motivation. (MLH)
Descriptors: Expectation, Failure, Grades (Scholastic), Labeling (of Persons)
Jung, Lee Ann; Guskey, Thomas R. – Online Submission, 2007
Grades, report cards, and other progress reports are important vehicles for communicating with families about their children's strengths, areas to target, and interventions that can be used at home. For families of children with disabilities, accurate information on learning progress is essential for understanding intervention effectiveness and…
Descriptors: Special Needs Students, Disabilities, Report Cards, Placement
Boyd, Lanita Bradley – Teaching Pre K-8, 1993
Emphasizes the importance of report card conferences, in which the teacher discusses with each student his or her performance during the marking period. Such conferences can help (1) eliminate misunderstandings between parents and teachers that result from students' confusion about their grades; (2) boost student morale; and (3) create a better…
Descriptors: Conferences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers

Woodward, John – Journal of School Improvement, 2001
Provides guidelines to make grades a better assessment of learning. Argues that, for any assessment task to be fair, its content, context, and performance expectations should (1) reflect knowledge appropriate to all students; (2) tap knowledge that all students have had time to acquire in the class; and (3) and be as free as possible of cultural,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Assessment, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education

Wright, Russell G. – Science Teacher, 1989
Explains the use of mean and median as grade averaging procedures for students in science. States that using the median produces numerous advantages for student and teacher. (RT)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Holistic Evaluation
Aidman, Barry Joel; Gates, Jonathan M.; Sims, Elizabeth A. Deterra – Here's How, 2000
To assign grades that accurately communicate student performance, conscientious teachers must ensure their grading is consistent with that of other teachers, reveals student progress, and remains sensitive to impacts on student motivation and parent reaction. Teachers, parents, and administrators of the Round Rock Independent School District in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Achievement Rating, Cooperative Planning
Burns, Edward – Charles C. Thomas, Publisher, Ltd, 2007
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) of 2004 has placed a renewed emphasis on the importance of the regular classroom, the regular classroom teacher and the general curriculum as the primary focus of special education. This book contains over 100 topics that deal with real issues and concerns regarding the regular classroom and…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Related Services (Special Education), General Education, Teacher Participation