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Wiggins, Alexis – Educational Leadership, 2022
A revision-based assessment system, driven by clear rubrics, can mean less stress, more effective feedback, and greater student learning. English teacher Alexis Wiggins shares an effective and time-friendly revision-based assessment system she developed that allows students to focus on learning, not their grade.
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Grading, Feedback (Response), High School Teachers
Feldman, Jo – Educational Leadership, 2018
Have teachers become too dependent on points? This article explores educators' dependency on their points systems, and the ways that points can distract teachers from really analyzing students' capabilities and achievements. Feldman argues that using a more subjective grading system can help illuminate crucial information about students and what…
Descriptors: Grading, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Criteria, Achievement Rating
Wiggins, Grant – Educational Leadership, 2014
Education has a long-standing practice of turning worthwhile learning goals into lists of bits. One might even say that this practice is the original sin in curriculum design: take a complex whole, divide it into small pieces, string those together in a rigid sequence of instruction and testing, and call completion of this sequence…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Mastery Learning, Educational Objectives, Criteria
Wormeli, Rick – Educational Leadership, 2011
Many teachers believe that denying students the opportunity to retake tests and redo assignments teaches them responsibility and prepares them for the working world. In reality, writes Wormeli, this practice has the opposite effect--it retards student achievement and maturation. In the real world, adults learn by repeated practice; they are not…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Educational Methods, Student Evaluation, School Policy
Brookhart, Susan M. – Educational Leadership, 2011
As they attempt to make the transition to standards-based grading, many schools go off track or get swamped by side issues, writes Brookhart. They waste energy having hard discussions about grading practice details that, by themselves, cannot accomplish real reform. Instead, schools should focus discussion on major questions: What meaning do we…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Teacher Attitudes, Participative Decision Making
Marzano, Robert J.; Heflebower, Tammy – Educational Leadership, 2011
In an effort to cure the ills of current grading and reporting systems, many schools and districts across the United States have attempted to implement a standards-based system. The authors recommend four best practices in this area: (1) Get rid of the omnibus grade, which tells teachers little about the content measured or the difficulty level of…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Difficulty Level, Grades (Scholastic), Academic Standards
Vatterott, Cathy – Educational Leadership, 2011
U.S. teachers grade homework far more than teachers in other countries, yet at least one study shows a negative correlation between grading homework and student achievement. More important, Vatterott notes, grading homework sends students unhelpful signals about the purpose and value of homework. By focusing on the grade, students view homework…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Homework, Grading, Correlation
Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2011
Educators seeking to reform grading must combat five long-held traditions that stand as formidable obstacles to change: (1) Grades should provide the basis for differentiating students; (2) grade distributions should resemble a bell-shaped curve; (3) grades should be based on students' standing among classmates; (4) poor grades prompt students to…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Academic Achievement, Grading, Educational Change
Jung, Lee Ann; Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2010
Teachers often grapple with the challenge of giving report card grades to students with learning disabilities and English language learners. The authors offer a five-step model that "offers a fair, accurate, and legal way to adapt the grading process for exceptional learners." The model begins with a high-quality reporting system for all students…
Descriptors: Report Cards, Student Needs, Grades (Scholastic), Learning Disabilities
McTighe, Jay; O'Connor, Ken – Educational Leadership, 2005
Classroom assessments fall into three categories--summative, diagnostic, and formative. Summative assessment occurs at the end of a unit or course of study and is therefore an insufficient tool to maximize student learning. Diagnostic and formative assessments, on the other hand, offer descriptive feedback along the way. In light of these…
Descriptors: Summative Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Grading, Student Evaluation
Huhn, Craig – Educational Leadership, 2005
A high school math teacher describes how U.S. schools unwittingly erode student learning by using assessments to emphasize the wrong goals. He claims that students have begun to see school as a "game" in which collecting the most points--seen as "capital" or wealth--leads them to success. Instead, he argues, assessment should…
Descriptors: Goal Orientation, Grading, Grades (Scholastic), Student Evaluation

Benson, Shirley Hildebrand – Educational Leadership, 2000
A high-school English teacher explains how she transformed her listless, "drive-thru" classes into "partnership" classes with highly motivated students eager to demonstrate and evaluate their skills. Students could work at their own best pace so long as the work got done and had acceptable quality. (MLH)
Descriptors: English Teachers, Evaluation Methods, Formative Evaluation, Grading