Annie
Diamond Member
- Nov 22, 2003
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Interestingly, you knew exactly what I meant....
Curving the grade is a great way to allow everyone to pass, including Ravi.
I never curved grades, if too many cannot score above 75%, something was wrong with the test or the presentation of material-need to start over. Actually even with subbing in high school, haven't seen tests that were curved. Perhaps it's falling out of practice?
Well, in either case:
1. Something was wrong with the test
2. Something was wrong with the presentation (which, I might add, is NOT necessarily the fault of the teacher)
Who is penalized?
A. If you count the grade, then all the kids with scores below 75%.
B. If you don't count the grade, then all the kids with scores above 75%.
Or, you could allow anyone to retake the test. When? Afterschool? Before School?
Then, in addition to measuring whatever the students learned, you also measure how dedicated they are to spending time after or before school (which has nothing to do with the purpose of public schooling).
First figure out if it was the test questions or their understanding. If test, I'd give it to anyone that wanted to retake, regardless of grade. For those with A's, either let them use the period to go to library, read, or work silently on homework if they didn't have a project to work on.
If presentation, I'd reteach. Then retest. Could there be A's even though the 'teacher' messed up in the lesson? Certainly, they have a large enough base of knowledge, they are good readers of the text and can make inferences that rest of class couldn't. I'd never make a kid retake a test that they are happy with their grade. Either case, it would be in class, since too many didn't fair well.
I can only think of two times that I allowed a 'retake' of a test that wasn't group based, as a compromise between parents, principal, and myself. I think it's inherently unfair to those that are ready. If a student 'fails' because they 'didn't feel well,' they should state such before the test. Both times I averaged their two grades. Since one was a D or F, they weren't going to jump over those who were prepared.