While STARS offers a variety of grading scales, schools are not
required to use the entire 1-100 point scale in their grading policies.... Katie Hansen Office of Academic Policy and Systems
Dear DOE administrators,
Either you are flagrantly flouting your own grading policy or you are
horribly confusing the terms: grading policy versus grading scale.
Hurricanes are categorized in a scale of 1 to 5. Weather stations, in
an attempt to make sure people always prepare adequately in case of
sudden storm strengthening, mandate that all storm broadcasts have
category 3 as the lowest possible scale reported. Makes sense?...
So if Principals can choose to use any of the 1-100 scale as you have
argued, is it okay if our school uses 64 as the lowest possible grade? Please respond.
Have a nice day.
Mr. Seung-Yong Ok
Hey, why not make the lowest score you can give "90"?
Follow-up to: Teacher Questions Flushing HS Principal's Grading System as Violation of DOE Rules
Office of Shael Polokow-Suransky responds:
Dear Mr. Ok,
Thank you for your email. We appreciate your concern and your
attention to these topics. Shael shared your message with me and asked
me to respond on his behalf. I am writing to reiterate the information
shared with you by Superintendent Mendez. It is the right of a school
principal to set the grading policy, including the number of marking
periods per term and the grades awarded to students who are excessively
absent. While STARS offers a variety of grading scales, schools are not
required to use the entire 1-100 point scale in their grading policies.
I hope this addresses your concern. Please continue to work with your
principal, your school’s Network Leader, and Superintendent Mendez if
you wish to discuss this matter further.
Best,
Katie Hansen Office of Academic Policy and Systems
Dear DOE administrators,
Either you are flagrantly flouting your own grading policy or you are
horribly confusing the terms: grading policy versus grading scale.
I will give you the benefit of the doubt that it's the latter. The
former would mean the DOE are a bunch of data manipulating bureaucrats
who put themselves ahead of children first. That would be too depressing
of a thought.
Principals are allowed to choose their own grading policy - # of
marking periods, Letter grades and their numerical equivalents,
Pass/Fail, and whether the policy is relates to courses, departments, or
school-wide.
However, it is absurd to interpret that as to mean principals can
choose their own numerical scale. That scale is stated as 1-100 in your
DOE policy.
So, here is an analogy to help you understand.
Hurricanes are categorized in a scale of 1 to 5. Weather stations, in
an attempt to make sure people always prepare adequately in case of
sudden storm strengthening, mandate that all storm broadcasts have
category 3 as the lowest possible scale reported. Makes sense?
Seung Ok