Grading: Proceed With Caution
A recent Washington Post article caught my eye and elicited a strong reaction from The Teacher Leader. When I saw the title "Taking Fs off the grade book," I knew that what followed would be trouble. I know because I have been there.
Through years of practice, I learned that a school's grading policy is one of the most difficult issues to address. Why? Grading is more about core beliefs than about following a procedure. A teacher's philosophy of grading reflects the teacher's beliefs about human nature and how students are motivated. In fact, one of our favorite interview questions for prospective teachers was to ask about their philosophy of grading. Their response told us more about them than just about any other question we asked.
In addition, everyone has attended school and has received grades. So, everyone has an opinion about grading. When you seek to change the grading policy, you will only here from the parents who received good grades when they were in school.
You will also hear complaints from your best students. They have learned the system and they follow the rules. They will not appreciate others being "rewarded" for not following the rules.
In other words, changes in grading practices will most likely be resisted by your most involved parents, your best teachers, and your highest performing students.
Grading is a cultural issue and cannot be properly addressed by simply changing policies. Grading policies are a cultural indicator. Culture changes require collaboration and the involvement of all stakeholders.
Changing grading policies won't change mindsets. Teachers who believe that students are motivated by fear of failure will grade accordingly as will teachers who believe that students are intrinsically motivated to learn. Teachers who believe that students either "have what it takes" or they don't, will continue to sort students for success. Instead of giving Fs, they will give Ds--a rich man's F. Conversely, teachers who believe that work and effort create ability will seek to raise every student to high levels of achievement.
In our school, we talked about grades for years, but when our teachers were allowed to take complete ownership of student success, grades ceased to be a major issue. I vividly remember a student being asked by a visitor to our school, "What is different about this school?" The student responded, "In this school, the teachers won't let you fail. They never give up on you. They make sure that you learn. They want you to do well."
Memos don't change culture
If what you want in your school is a culture of success in which every student expects and is expected to succeed and to achieve at high levels, then declaring "no more Fs" is not the solution.
Changes in school culture take years and many, many conversations. Memos won't change culture.
Start with data. Present the data on student grades to your school improvement team and begin the conversation. Make teachers a part of the solution. Memos aren't solutions. Teachers don't take pleasure in failing students. If they knew the answer, they would already be using it.
When leading change efforts, start small and work with the willing. Otherwise, you will be spending most of your time on damage control.
Treat your school as a laboratory. Encourage the school improvement team to find a group in your school that would be willing to try out a new method of grading. Let them work out the kinks and let them present their findings to the faculty.
The Bottom Line
Trust your teachers and partner with them to build a supportive school culture. Remember, this is "our school," not "my school."
Learn more about this blog and "head blogger" Mel Riddile...


Comments
Grades detract from learning. Once you focus your class on grades you will have a hard time getting them to care about your content in a passionate manner. If we just let students move on to the next thing they are ready for in terms of skills and allow them to pursue their interests and passions as we do so, then grades aren't necessary.
Posted by: Douglas W. Green, EdD | November 22, 2010 09:13 PM
Great article. Unfortunately, many of these decisions are coming from outside of the school these days.
Posted by: fred silva | November 23, 2010 05:09 PM
Once again Mr. Riddle you are correct! I could not agree with you more. As with anything in the school, it first depends on the leadership approach. Are you going to take a collective/shared leadership approach or authoritative/top-down approach?
It is also a matter of being patient in the change process. It takes time for people, especially when talking about core beliefs (such as grading) to make changes.
Thanks for a great post!
Posted by: Mr. Taranto | November 23, 2010 05:10 PM
Totally agree with the points raised here. It is not easy to help make this grading mindset change, memos don't make it so, and neither does one or two interest groups. In being involved in a systemic change like this I have seen first hand how our most successful students and their parents rail against a move such as this because to them it appears to reward them, the more successful students less, and it brings the least successful students closer in GPA to the more successful students! Over time you can do this with systemic long-range institutional work/change (standards-based teaching, Differentiation, personal learning plans, increased instructional support of teaching staff) through helping those in need (teachers and students) be more successful.
Posted by: Christian Elkington | November 24, 2010 08:09 AM
Well said. There is a lot of kick back on putting the best practices in place! How to educate people is key. Thanks for a great article!
Posted by: Elizabeth Petersen | November 24, 2010 02:05 PM