The Grading
Debate: Accuracy, Fairness, Specificity
The
mathematical system of grading has never been my strength in assessing
students. My colleagues and friends will
agree that numbers are not my thing. So,
when I read the statement from chapter 3, “Teachers defend the accuracy of a
grade because the final result conforms to the mathematical system that they
have created, but this sort of numerical precision creates only the illusion of
accuracy. “ boy can I relate to that
ILLUSION. Reading further into that
chapter Clymer and Wiliam use the analogy of grades and temperature which was
more comfortable information for me to read.
Either way you look at grading as a mathematical system or weather
analogy an assessment needs to be done keeping in mind that assessment is to
provide feedback. Now the challenge, is
the feedback accurate, fair and specific?
Accuracy
needs to be a mathematical system for logistically calculating your honor
roll, scholarships, and statistics, but does it really give you the picture of
what a student knows. That is where, as
teachers, we fall into that human judgment which sets us up for error. So it’s a continuous process to be accurate
with our grading process. How do we
make grading fair? In the classroom it
is hard to keep grading fair with all the different levels of assistance. Does that one grade fairly describe the
student’s knowledge? Which leads to specificity, are we grading specific skills or
effort?
I have recently
taken the step of not grading homework or very little.
When I look at fairness I feel there is too much cheating going on which
rules out the fair climate. I have also implemented a rubric form of grading on
classwork. Honestly it has helped me
toward my sanity of grading 100 papers at times. Boy does my grade book look different. Going from around 700 points a quarter to 200,
Yikes! It looks like I’m not doing
anything in my class. Does this number
paint a fair picture of what does go on in my class? Also the students are having a bit of a
learning curve when it comes to viewing their daily work and test grades. It is hard to break that stereotypical behavior
of that % OR letter grade. Does this new
practice answer the question of fairness? No.
I still have students that will not even complete 5 questions in class,
while others complete that and more.
Fair-who gets the 5 or who gets the 1? Is that grading knowledge or effort? What does that tell me? So many questions so little time.
To produce an accurate grade on student
performance I truly believe we need to grade on a specific principle. Pick a standard or big idea and see if that
student can demonstrate that or show progress in learning the concept. A separate grade on personal character
showing effort, attitude, and behavior should also be posted too.
That is what my next goal is and where I will take my next steps,
Specific feedback. Specific feedback
fits into our school wide plan of core standards and standard based
grading. But I foresee major
roadblocks. This has to be a district
goal which puts all teachers on the same grading practices. It also raises questions to honor roll,
eligibility, scholarship applications, class rankings, grading scale. This new perspective not only effects the
school climate but the community as they scan the paper to see who are the
brightest students of Rugby High School as the honor roll appears in bold print!
Any time you try something new there will be growing pains. I think it is about finding a happy medium between theory and reality. It sounds as though you have seriously questioned your grading and homework practices. Good for you!
ReplyDeleteWe are certainly talking about a dramatic shift in grading and homework practice.