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Home » EdSource: Why Some California Schools Districts Are Changing How Students Earn Grades

EdSource: Why Some California Schools Districts Are Changing How Students Earn Grades

by CLAYCORD.com
44 comments

By Carolyn Jones and John Fensterwald – EdSource

Some of California’s largest school districts are trying an unconventional tactic to help students re-engage in school after distance learning and boost their chances of acceptance into the state’s public colleges: by dropping D and F grades.

Los Angeles Unified, Oakland Unified, Sacramento City Unified, San Diego Unified and other districts are phasing out grades below a C for high school students. If a student fails a test or doesn’t complete their homework, they’ll be able to retake the test and get more time to turn in assignments. The idea is to encourage students to learn the course material and not be derailed by a low grade that could potentially disqualify them from admission to the University of California and California State University. Students who don’t learn the material, pass the final exam or finish homework by the end of the semester would earn an “incomplete.”

“Our hope is that students begin to see school as a place of learning, where they can take risks and learn from mistakes, instead of a place of compliance,” said Nidya Baez, assistant principal at Fremont High in Oakland Unified. “Right now, we have a system where we give a million points for a million pieces of paper that students turn in, without much attention to what they’re actually learning.”

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Although education reform advocates have been pushing for this for years, the pandemic offered an opportunity for districts to put it into action. With so many students languishing academically after a year of distance learning, districts see dropping D’s and F’s as a way to help students who had been most impacted by the pandemic, especially Black, Latino and low-income students.

But the move is also, potentially, a step toward an entirely different learning system, in which students are assessed by what they’ve learned, not how well they perform on tests on a given day or whether they turn in their homework on time. Known as competency — or mastery-based learning — the style has been a staple of some private and charter schools for years, and a goal for education reformers trying to overhaul the traditional high school system.

While traditional grading may have worked for previous generations, a competency-based system is better suited for the rapidly changing workplace of the future, said Devin Vodicka, former superintendent of Vista Unified in San Diego County and chief executive of the Learner-Centered Collaborative, a nonprofit that helps districts shift to competency-based learning.

“We need a system that gets beyond the institutional model and provides more meaningful feedback for students,” Vodicka said. “The future is going to require less focus on time and more focus on what we can do and contribute, and the quality of our performance. We need to prepare our students for this.”

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At most high schools, grades are linked to time; a grade reflects how well a student has performed on tests and homework by the end of a semester. Grades can open doors to advanced classes and are the primary component of college admissions, especially since universities like UC and CSU temporarily dropped standardized tests as part of the admissions criteria.

But they’re notoriously subjective. The state Education Code gives teachers the authority to issue grades, but it doesn’t specify how those grades should be determined. Some teachers grade on a curve, with only a set number of students earning A’s or B’s, while others are more lax. An informal EdSource survey of about two dozen California teachers found that 57 percent rarely or never gave D.s and F’s. Only 7 percent said they did frequently.

“Grades are punitive and provide no information on standards mastery,” one teacher wrote. “I would love (grading) to be based on mastery of standards and … authentic feedback.”

But for some teachers, Ds and Fs play an important role in the classroom. They signal that a student did not learn the material and needs extra help. Dropping Ds and Fs doesn’t guarantee that students will learn the material, even with extra help, and may lead to grade inflation, said Debora Rinehart, a math and science teacher at St. Theresa School, a Catholic school in Oakland.

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“I will work with any student before or after school or even on the weekend to help them learn. However, I will never lie about their knowledge level,” she said. “Not reporting Ds and Fs is the equivalent of lying about a student’s progress.”

But the vast difference in teachers’ grading styles has resulted in a system where grades are nearly useless as an indicator of students’ abilities, said Alix Gallagher, director of strategic partnerships at Policy Analysis for California Education.

“What does a grade mean? It’s a mix of things, and it’s different from teacher to teacher. It can actually be radically different,” she said. “As it’s practiced now, grading is idiosyncratic, and that’s not a good thing.”

Too often, she said, grades take on outsized importance for students, and those who get Ds or Fs become discouraged or disengage even further, never learning the material they missed to begin with.

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“Instruction is what leads to learning. Not grading. They’re separate. That’s the problem — we have a disconnect between instruction, learning and grading,” she said.

Patricia Russell runs the Mastery Transcript Consortium, a nonprofit that advises school districts and colleges on alternatives to grades. Interest in the topic has been soaring, she said. In the three years since the group started, membership has increased from four districts to more than two dozen nationwide.

For college applications, Russell’s group encourages students to submit a portfolio that includes essays, tests with high scores, videos showing oral presentations, lab projects or other items that showcase a student’s best work.

The idea is to show colleges evidence of what a student can actually do, not a teacher’s interpretation based on a limited grading scale.

“We’re talking about people who are very young, and labeling them at such an early age as ‘less than’ or ‘more than’ can have significant psychological repercussions,” Russell said. “Some things in life are zero-sum games, but learning should not be.”

Two large school improvement networks, supported by foundations, have made re-examining grading policies a priority.

Laura Schwalm, a retired superintendent of Garden Grove Unified who is now chief of staff of California Education Partners, said the aim is a grading system that puts students on track for admission to the UC and CSU, as well as trade schools.

“Graduating with a D, in career and technology courses, too, leaves students with few choices,” she said. “No one is saying water down grades. This is about giving support, not lowering standards, and looking for simple ways to make grading more fair, to give kids a fighting chance and to measure what students know with multiple opportunities to show that.”

Lynn Rocha-Salazar, a former principal in Fresno Unified who is now CORE Districts’ senior improvement coach, said the work on grading preceded Covid, but the pandemic underscored the need for it.

“Those who had not been well served were penalized the most. … So now is a time to examine grading practices to see the harm that was done,” she said.

Lindsay Unified, in rural Tulare County, has been moving toward a competency-based system for several years, and results are promising. Students at Lindsay High School, nearly all of whom are low-income and Latino, scored higher than the state average among all student groups on math and English language arts tests, as well as in college and career readiness, according to the 2019 California School Dashboard.

In Oakland, high schools are moving gradually toward a new system of assessment that doesn’t include D’s and F’s. Baez, assistant principal at Fremont High, said the change will not happen overnight. Parents, students and especially teachers need time to understand what’s expected of them, and they must “buy in” to the change, she said.

“It has to be a cultural shift at the school. You have to build trust because we’re really rebuilding an entire system,” Baez said. “It will be a lot of work, but it’s important we do this because traditional grades benefit some kids, but they don’t help everyone.”

44 comments


WC December 7, 2021 - 10:09 AM - 10:09 AM

Smoke and mirrors. This should be called ‘how to raise the grade point average so the rubes think we’re actually teaching their kids.’

stove December 7, 2021 - 1:33 PM - 1:33 PM

This pussification is to the detriment of all students. Will result in stupid kids in the future….

Ricardoh December 7, 2021 - 10:16 AM - 10:16 AM

How about if they are given credit for the days they show up with a pencil. Why are we going to hell in a hand basket?

Bruh December 7, 2021 - 10:32 AM - 10:32 AM

Can’t wait to see how this crashes and burns like everything else Dems and “progressives” touch.

Gruesome Newsom December 7, 2021 - 10:42 AM - 10:42 AM

Another brilliant concept from the progressive left. They get so many things wrong I wonder if they have any self reflection and ability to admit their failures? All I see is them doubling down on stupidity

Sign from Above December 7, 2021 - 11:02 AM - 11:02 AM

Great! More dumbing down of America. Really?

My child goes to school in a district that believes in the issuance of D and F grades for those that can’t comprehend the material, or are too lazy to actively participate in their learning, He works very hard to be successful in school. Now he will be competing against other kids that have a falsely inflated GPA when applying to colleges? This is fair?

How can a kid be expected to be successful in college if he/she can’t handle the “rigors” of high school? Are we going to follow this up by simply passing everyone that applies to college, whether or not they know the material? Many private “degree mills” are out there right now that do exactly that. They also have a reputation for providing a subpar education. Do we want our entire education system to become worthless? Sounds like it to me. PASS ALL THE LITTLE SNOWFLAKES!! We wouldn’t want to hurt their sensitive little psyche by telling them they failed to meet minimum guidelines.

tashaj December 7, 2021 - 11:06 AM - 11:06 AM

Ah – yes! Of course! Now that UC has dropped an SAT requirement, it’s time to fix the GPA. So that all those pesky Ds and Fs can’t prevent any half-literate moron from getting a college degree in some intersectionality and grievance studies. And then they can become “CORE Districts’ senior improvement coach” (whatever the fukc that means, but I’m sure it pays $100K+ a year plus benefits).
So… I have an even better idea – why don’t we drop all grades below A? Or even award a high school diploma to everyone at birth? After all, “we’re really rebuilding an entire system” according to Nidya Baez, an assistant principal in OUSD Fremont High. Might as well do a good job at it. No?

Yoyohop December 7, 2021 - 11:43 AM - 11:43 AM

GPA correlated with SAT scores enough so as to be redundant – just another hoop you paid to jump through

tashaj December 7, 2021 - 10:55 PM - 10:55 PM

Ah – the correlation between GPA and SAT and the alleged redundancy of the latter…

First, one would expect a certain level of correlation between SAT and HSGPA. After all, both are related to the student’s cognitive ability, no? So this by itself doesn’t make SAT redundant.

Second, both SAT and HSGPA suck in predicting college success. SAT does worse for CalState, while HSGPA does worse for UC. A combo of SAT and HSGPA does better for both, but especially for UC. Which wouldn’t happen if SAT was redundant with HSGPA.
Here is an infographic with the latest data for CA:
https://edpolicyinca.org/sites/default/files/PACE_Infographic-Pridicting_College_Success_201904.pdf

Third, there isn’t any single or combined score that can predict more than 40% of the first year college GPA variation. Including the latest CA invention – “Smart Balanced Assessment”, which actually does worse than SAT.

But even if SAT was completely redundant with HSGPA (which it isn’t), keeping SAT is still important. Because it’s an independent yardstick, which cannot be manipulated by the school districts and CA Dept of Education. And against which any new hare-brained metric devised by CA “educators” can be benchmarked.

chuckie the troll December 7, 2021 - 11:13 AM - 11:13 AM

This sounds like a system designed to hide student, teacher, school and district failures.

If a C is the worst grade you can earn, then anyone can graduate or be promoted to the next grade. I can’t think of a better program to make a High School Diploma absolutely worthless.

Justifiable Languor December 7, 2021 - 11:14 AM - 11:14 AM

Bring back Trade schools. Some people are not college bound They succeed very well in Trades and Services.

Ricardoh December 7, 2021 - 11:54 AM - 11:54 AM

When I went to high school in Los Angeles in the 1950s we had the best shops with the best equipment available. Wood , metal, electric, and automotive. They have none of that now. The liberal elitist got rid of shops.

Ricardoh December 7, 2021 - 11:55 AM - 11:55 AM

Some of us made more money than college graduates.

Justifiable languor December 7, 2021 - 2:46 PM - 2:46 PM

Yes. I took mechanical drawing in SoCal. Then I moved to WC. Nothing. The Math classes were behind.

And yes, a good living can be made without a liberal arts degree. I don’t know how far an Apprentice can go without formal training. Which is always recommended. Math, English and science is always a plus. I think kids are bored. Teaching should be punched up not dragged down to a snails pace.

anon December 7, 2021 - 11:37 AM - 11:37 AM

The lazy, decadent teachers failed completely in their function for 18+ months, so the children are now dim-witted and under educated to a degree that only a tiny number can hope to graduate.

So the lazy, decadent teachers just lower the standard for graduation.

This is a very American approach to dim children and worthless educators.

Glen223 December 7, 2021 - 1:21 PM - 1:21 PM

Tiny number can graduate? Hell, they’re setting it up so everyone can graduate- without knowing a damn thing.

Just more participation trophies for showing up in class.

TTD December 7, 2021 - 11:50 AM - 11:50 AM

All I can say is “wow” just “wow”. How do people in charge come up with these ideas? This will in no way prepare a student for the next educational step and/or the work force (or just for life in general).

parent December 7, 2021 - 11:51 AM - 11:51 AM

I had to check the date of this article .. cause, I mean, this would be funny if it was April 1st. Unfortunately, it is not … and now I need to work with folks who never failed?

First, we give out participation trophies.
You can steal, rob, etc if you really *need* the item.
Stop lights areonly mere suggestions.
We pay people to stay home.
Cars are no longer registered or insured (saw the 90’s accord this morning with a sticker from 2019 driving down Contra Costa).
And now, no more D’s and F’s …

California is STUPID. STUPID.

Are we living in the Twilight Zone by chance …

MH December 7, 2021 - 11:52 AM - 11:52 AM

Save your children! Homeschool!

To Do List December 7, 2021 - 12:06 PM - 12:06 PM

The whole system is a mess so this issue isn’t even in the top 10 problems. The UC and Cal State are mentioned here as a factor, and that system is also a mess. For example, I would rather have a promising student with a couple of bad grades from California admitted to a UC or Cal State rather than giving any preference to a straight A student from the Guangdong province in China. We paid the taxes for this system but they give preference to foreign students because they pay higher tuition. If UC and Cal State want to play the for profit game, lets start charging them rent for the land and buildings and tax their tuition receipts as income.

larry December 7, 2021 - 12:12 PM - 12:12 PM

No surprise, for example if you lower the standards enough any one can become President and Vice President of The United States. The proof is currently in office as I type this.

Ricardoh December 7, 2021 - 12:36 PM - 12:36 PM

Years ago I had a friend who was a professor at the University of Washington in Seattle. He was part of the movement to dumb down education. We argued politics often. It never came to name calling. Maybe it should have. I’m sure he was communist but he never admitted it.

Glen223 December 7, 2021 - 12:25 PM - 12:25 PM

Great – next they’ll be dumbing down the college courses and eliminating grades there…

So anyone failing med school will be able to hang up their shingle.

Since the schools and teachers are failing, it’s time to defund the public school system…..and the state boards of education and the NEA etc, etc….

They’re nothing but a bunch left wing mouthpieces anyway. Trade schools are the way to go.

Exit 12A December 7, 2021 - 12:28 PM - 12:28 PM

.
***SNOWFLAKE GRADING SYSTEM***
.

Randy December 7, 2021 - 12:35 PM - 12:35 PM

..another “dumbing” of the kids by the libs … same as letting Cali teachers not have to pass all the requirements normally associated with getting the real credentials… that’s why Cali 47th and we used to be at the top of the nation

From Clayton December 7, 2021 - 12:53 PM - 12:53 PM

The students this will be affecting absolutely do not want to go to college in the first place. Instead, they should be introducing them to the trades so they can start earning a respectable salary directly after high school. It’s a no brainer.

Janus December 7, 2021 - 12:54 PM - 12:54 PM

Hard to criticize or should I say quantify the quality of education when there are no benchmarks by which to judge schools or school districts’ effectiveness.

I would imagine eliminating California Standardized Testing and Reporting (STAR) Program will be the next objective.

If no one can fails then everyone must be passing? With this educational philosophy we will be lucky to maintain a standard of mediocracy. Not everyone should get a trophy.

Googlar December 7, 2021 - 1:13 PM - 1:13 PM

Because with diversity comes the gift of low IQ and the current white curriculum is too advanced for the new generations.

Led December 7, 2021 - 1:18 PM - 1:18 PM

Step 1: Don’t teach kids for almost two years.

Step 2: Get funded anyway.

Step 3: Erase the measurements that would show how much damage we did in Step 1.

DD December 7, 2021 - 1:51 PM - 1:51 PM

Institutionalized mediocrity.

SS December 7, 2021 - 2:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Y’all are missing the point. It’s about giving them an incomplete – which ends up reverting to an F if not made up within a year. It’s a temporary fix to the problems presented in learning during lock down. The real F students who don’t give a F$%k will still get F’s. Dedicated kids trying to recover will be able to do so. None of you know what you’re talking about if you are not in education. None of us has lived through a pandemic like this unless you are 103 years old. Having gone to school does not make you an expert on school, curriculum, or the learning needs of a classroom.

parent December 7, 2021 - 2:43 PM - 2:43 PM

SS
Triggered much?

No, the point is that they are trying to take the D and F away from a student who DESERVES to fail.

The point is, that teachers and people like you, are trying to cater to group of folks who don’t want to do crap, but want all the benifits of working without working.

The point is, children (and adults as well) need to be taught that there are consequences to our actions. No work, no pay. No work, no benefits.

I personally am sick and tired of people like you who want to enable this pathetic behavior.

As for education … yes, I am certified by the state to teach. No, I do not do it daily. But you do not need to be involved in education to understand we are handicapping our children with this continued approach of no consequnces.

Led December 9, 2021 - 11:21 PM - 11:21 PM

Yeah, all you citizens need to shut up and let the experts run this show. The experts like SS who think kids fall into two neat baskets: those who will be screwed anyway and those who will be just fine and not permanently damaged by having their education destroyed for two years, and anyway we experts aren’t going to measure that damage so it probably isn’t real, la la la I can’t hear you!

Anonymous December 7, 2021 - 3:33 PM - 3:33 PM

Absolutely unbelievable. That article is complete garbage.

Without addressing every point of insanity, all I can say is if this comes to pass it will be the final nail in the California public school system and force parents to home school or pay for private school.

Jeff (the other one) December 7, 2021 - 3:48 PM - 3:48 PM

I hate to say I have seen many examples of the results of this drop in educational requirements. Dealing with people in their 20s and even 30s where you can see the gears just don’t quite engage. It is not that they are challenged, it is just they do not have the training to look at concepts beyond what happens in the next 2 seconds, no ability for even the slightest critical thought. Hard workers (most of them) to be sure, just, not very quick witted. Sadly, I am sure they all up to date on the newest billie eilsh album, or what they need to put to identify as some sort of specific group ,just not so much on the 3 R’s.

The Fearless Spectator December 7, 2021 - 3:48 PM - 3:48 PM

Grades are punitive? No.

Classes can ruin a GPA? Yes, if the student doesn’t try.

Chris December 7, 2021 - 4:41 PM - 4:41 PM

If schools drop the D and Fs, they are only setting them up for disappointment and failure when they enter a place where students are usually not held by the hands.

Cellophane December 7, 2021 - 4:47 PM - 4:47 PM

They’ve tried this baloney before.

It failed then and it’ll fail now.

Just like Base 7 Math and spelling phonetically.

With all their high-priced educations and years of experience, one would think they could come up with something that hasn’t already been proven an F failure.

Pony December 7, 2021 - 5:11 PM - 5:11 PM

It wasn’t that long ago that Pass/Fail was in vogue. This is another form of that except this time they dropped that pesky fail

nytemuvr December 7, 2021 - 6:43 PM - 6:43 PM

Bring back Ebonics!

Concord74 December 7, 2021 - 7:55 PM - 7:55 PM

I came from the South but not the “hard South”. When I spoke to a number of people here after moving from Texas to SF, I was amazed at the ignorance exhibited by some of my classmates and later on when I got gainful employment! I learned in a Civics oriented class in Junior High about the 3 Branches of government ie. checks and balances. The check
and balances went out the window when Bill Clinton became POTUS Most of the people I worked with could not name the 3 Branches involved! They could not differentiate from the Bill of Rights and the full Constitution. I was amazed at the lack of knowledge of World Geo and World History.
I transferred from a high school that held the distinction of the same level as Lowell-SF. I was advised I would have a difficult time to adapt to the “high level” of California school curriculum! That was a joke! I became undiscipline and did not study as hard as I should have.

Michael December 8, 2021 - 3:18 PM - 3:18 PM

They could keep giving the test with only previous wrong questions until they earn a “C” grade. At least it is a measurable metric that shows a satisfactory result before being moved forward.

Masked Singer December 8, 2021 - 8:30 PM - 8:30 PM

Now there is also talk of getting rid of advanced math courses in high schools as an equity play. That’ll keep those pesky Asian kids out of Cal for sure.

Citizen S December 9, 2021 - 1:52 AM - 1:52 AM

Public schools are garbage anyways who cares you literally learn absolutely nothing of value to real life existence. Do you learn how to pay taxes no…do you learn any skill that will get you a job no…do you learn how to manage people no …do you learn how govt actually works no… The real learning begins when you leave school and have to do these things. High school diplomas should not even be a standard to entering higher education if you actually want to learn a skill that will get you a job. If we didn’t require a piece of paper for a job, college or the military maybe more people would actually have jobs ….wages should be based on skills acquired even after college most jobs want experience in that field. Highschool should literally just be internship programs in companies that interest the person to acquire the skill to do the job they want in life.


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