Minimum grade IS grade Inflation, district’s claims notwithstanding

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that in the Pittsburgh Public Schools, students now get a minimum grade of 50% for assignments and tests, even if their actual percentage score is lower.  District spokeswoman Ebony Pugh said

If a student gets a 20 percent in a class for the first marking period, he or she would need a 100 percent during the second marking period just to squeak through the semester.  [...]  We want to create situations where students can recover and not give up. [...]  It’s not grade inflation.

In other words, instead of giving that hypothetical student with 20% and 100% scores for the two grading periods a cumulative grade of 60% (“D”), the student would get a cumulative grade of 75% (“C”).  How can this possibly be considered not to be grade inflation?  Effectively this devalues the grades of all students in the district; potential employers or college admissions personnel who are familiar with the policy would have to assume that a student given a “C” grade may have actually done substandard work.

Ms. Pugh’s demonstrated level of understanding of mathematics is such that she is not qualified to be an assistant manager in a fast food restaurant, much less an employee of a school district.

[Bensalem School District] Superintendent James Lombardo said he’s in favor of implementing the idea, partly as a fairness issue. He noted that a failing grade carries far more mathematical weight than any other grade if the “E” or “F” has a range of zero to 59 percent.

“I guess I laud the Pittsburgh district for recognizing some of the foibles of our numerical system,”

It is now a “foible” that school work scored below 50% is seriously substandard?

If it is a fairness issue, how is it fair that some “D” students will be given “C” grades instead?

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One Response to Minimum grade IS grade Inflation, district’s claims notwithstanding

  1. Marcel says:

    Yes, this kind of thing is known and discounted. As grades have become inflated, the minimum passing grade has gone from D to C at some colleges. In theory the student passed geometry (itself a remedial class at the college level) with a D. But his next math class requires him to have passed with a C or better, or the student’s employer will only reimburse his tuition for a B or better. So it’s certainly unfair, and ultimately useless.

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