Should we inflate Advanced Placement grades?
Class Struggle by Jay Mathews
Welcome! A blog, run by Jennifer Abell, Vice Chair of the Charles County Board of Education, involving topics and issues on education and children. Comments are not official communications of the Charles County School Board but are a personal effort to be more transparent. Both complimentary comments and constructive criticism are not only appreciated but encouraged. Student participation is also encouraged and therefore the use of proper language and decorum is requested at all times.
Class Struggle by Jay Mathews
Posted by Rebisa at 9:00 PM
Labels Curriculum, Gifted Education
MY PLEDGE TO YOU
"I will serve as an educational advocate on behalf of our community in order to advance the educational vision for our schools, pursue its goals, and encourage progress as we work together in a diverse society."
7 comments:
"Should we inflate Advanced Placement grades?"
No.
"But I later realized I had misunderstood what Escalante was doing."
Yep.
CCPS has always inflated AP grades. Just compare your kid's reportcard grade (A or B) with his AP score (1 or 1.5)
And this has been going on for years.
So why hasn't the BOE done anything to discipline the teachers that perpetuate this dishonesty?
It's a joke. We have teachers that are now stopping any teaching of their AP class, as they feel that the students can take the class in college.
Could Anon @ 1:57 please explain: “We have teachers that are now stopping any teaching of their AP class, as they feel that the students can take the class in college.”
Do you mean that CCPS has teachers qualified to teach AP classes who will not do so anymore because the students can simply take the class in college? Because (by implication) trying to teach AP in CCPS is pointless?
Or do you mean that teachers are not following the AP course syllabus? What are they doing instead?
No.
I mean that the teacher has stopped teaching the class material for the year.
Now they are working on college applications. So, I guess you can say that anybody in the class will get a big old "1" on the AP test.
Ain't that a knee slapper?
LegalBeaglette,
Why don't you find out why they won't allow experts from the community in to observe teachers that year after year have the majority of their AP students score an average of 1.5 on their tests?
They may be "highly qualified" by the corrupt teacher's unions, but they either don't know the material, can't teach worth crap, or all of the above.
Jaime Escalante has died. May he rest in peace.
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