Blog Ini Bertujuan Membantu mendidik masyarakat di bidang matematik (Helping community in studying mathematic)
Kamis, 30 Juni 2011
Grading
It was disconcerting recently to realize that my grading policy is still dysfunctional. As much as I've moved towards standards-based grading for content, end result evaluation, and student-chosen exemplars, there's vestiges of teacher control and obedience.
With my spectacular grad class this summer (see here and here), there's still an attendance policy. I felt a conflict because going by my own policy would mean giving a grade or two below A to students who exceeded my goals for the course. I asked the students how they felt about it. All inservice teachers, they asked "were the goals met?"
I was lucky in that this was about an A, A- or B+. No heart-rending decisions. But in another situation, it easily could be.
In the end I did the right thing. But now I'm considering how much coercion I want in my syllabi. I make class worthwhile, as much as I can. (This class's most frequent student evaluation comment was wanting more classes to explore what we did in more depth.) Do I have to try to make my students come to class? Is it coercion or support? You know, to help them make the "right" decision.
As it is, I get requests to have more due dates, and require things from them more frequently. Do they need it? What can I do instead, with which I can live? Help!
Images: from the excellent but on hiatus wetherobots.com.
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