Is the traditional A-B-C-D-F
report card meeting the grade? Is a skills checklist a better way to go
in this age of standards and accountability? Does a narrative report card
help settle debate over what letter grades actually mean? This week, Education
World explores the pluses and minuses of a variety of report card formats.
A child brings home his report card, and his parents are happy to see
A's in English, math, and science. The proud parents share their good
news with relatives. They use those grades to compare their child's performance
to that of other children in the neighborhood.
A lot rides on the child's grades, but little thought is given to a
larger question: What do those grades really mean?
Unless a school district has a strict set of curriculum goals for each
classroom -- and the teacher adheres to those guidelines -- there is no
way for a parent to accurately know what those letter grades represent.
Another complaint against the traditional A-B-C-D-F grading system is
that some teachers grade against standards and others compare students
within the classroom. Little Johnny might get a B in English, but does
that mean he can read or write according to grade level?
AN EMOTIONAL ISSUE!
Many school districts are re-examining their current approaches to report
cards and grading. And, as any school administrator can tell you, the
search for the "right" report card can become a very emotional issue.
Some school districts are attempting to support the A-B-C-D-F grading
system by adding a narrative to the report card. In other systems, the
narrative approach has been adopted for use across the primary grades;
letter grades are not introduced until third or fifth grade.
Other school districts have dropped the traditional report card in favor
of skills checklists. Those checklists detail the various skills (standards)
required within the curriculum at each grade level. A check next to a
skill indicates that the student has mastered that skill. This method
has found opposition in some districts, though, as parents seek a simpler,
more concrete way of gauging their child's work at school.
BUT WHAT DOES AN A REALLY MEAN?
"There is always a lot of clamor when report cards get changed," Paul
Houston, executive director of the www.aasa.org American Association of
School Administrators, told Education World. "Parents are used to the
grades because that is what most of them got, and they think they mean
something."
"The fact is that an A is very subjective depending on the teacher,"
said Houston, "but parents like the security of what appears to be an
objective measure." Letter grades give the appearance of assessment without
really doing so, he added.
Houston drew an analogy between letter grades and golfer Tiger Woods
by comparing Woods's A game in golf to Houston's own A game. "If Woods's
game became the standard for every golfer, most every other golfer would
be an F golfer and would take up tennis," he said.
"On the other hand, if we are realistic and make adjustments based on
ability, then what does an A mean?" Houston added. "Better just to acknowledge
that he plays a game not normally seen on this planet and my game has
the following strengths and areas needing improvement."
Houston believes the traditional system is limited and that it must
include other measures and systems, including samples of student work,
standardized tests, and narratives. "I have always thought effort should
also be a part of the report," he said.
Report card change usually comes about because of the limited nature
of traditional systems, Houston said. But, he added, many school districts
eventually return to traditional grading methods because of political
pressure or parent dissatisfaction.
"Grades were with us long before the accountability era," Houston told
Education World. "Today there is much more pressure to show results, and
so grades are caught up in it.
"Grades create an expectation that there are certain specific expectations
that should be met at certain times," he added. "That does not track with
reality and can harm a child's motivation at the very time we should be
improving it."
TRADITIONAL GRADING A 'GRAY AREA'
"Traditional grading is something that some parents think that they
understand. But those grades must be combined with a more detailed picture
of a student's progress," said Pamela Chandler, a teacher at Sequoia Middle
School in Redding, California.
Chandler told of an administrator who suggested giving two grades for
each subject, one based on effort and progress and another indicating
the grade level equivalency that a student is working at. "That would
give students who are working their butts off recognition for how hard
they are trying, yet not 'cheapen' the A work of a student who is working
at or above grade level," she said.
Chandler admits that traditional grading does bring with it a certain
"gray area," because each teacher has a different idea of the meaning
behind those grades.
"Some teachers put more weight on effort than others, so that students
who are below grade level in skill could conceivably receive an A if they
work hard," Chandler added. "Others give no A's or B's to students who
are below grade level and A's only to those students working at or above
grade level.
"Someone looking at the grades in kids' records really and truly do
not know what those grades mean," she added.
NARRATIVES ARE WORTH THE TIME
Although Chandler still sends home report cards with traditional grades
on them, she also offers parents other proof of students' progress. For
example, she sends home students' writing samples so parents can see how
students' writing skills are improving.
"I conference with each kid before I send those reports home," Chandler
told Education World. "It is wonderful to see their reactions when I show
them the progress they have made."
"Kids can't wait to take these home and share them with their parents,"
she added. "To me, these reports give a much clearer picture of where
a student has been, where they are now, and what direction they need to
go in the future."
Chandler wishes she could send detailed reports home more often, but
the time factor makes that impossible. If she had smaller size classes,
she believes, the communication between parent and teacher could grow.
"Another benefit of this type of reporting is that I have seen students'
degree of effort increase directly as a result of knowing this type of
information," she said.
MAKING NARRATIVE REPORT CARDS WORK
The
Carroll County (Maryland) school district piloted for three years
a new report card that included narratives. But that report card didn't
have the approval of all teachers and parents, according to Margaret Pfaff,
the district's director of elementary schools, curriculum, instruction,
and staff development.
"Our goal was to try to provide parents with more specific information
regarding their child's progress as it relates to our system's essential
curriculum," Pfaff told Education World. "Though the report card contained
a lot of valuable information, it was very cumbersome for teachers and
too complex for parents."
Pfaff believes a narrative type of report card is far more valuable
than traditional report cards, but time got in the way. By trying to meet
everyone's needs with the new report cards, she said, the district created
a "monster."
"The issue is simply that letter grades do not accurately represent
a student's progress nor do they convey much meaning. Letter grades are
very abstract to young children and do not reflect their development level
or performance," Pfaff said.
PARENTS RELATE GRADES TO THEIR SCHOOLING EXPERIENCE
"Our parents objected to the newer report card because they felt the
ratings were too abstract," said Pfaff. "Parents relate grades to their
schooling experience and seem to think that letter grades do have meaning."
In addition, Pfaff said, many teachers felt more comfortable with letter
grades because they feel they can more easily justify them with individual
scores on tests.
"They prefer to have something concrete to share with parents," she
said.
COMPUTERS TO THE RESCUE
More and more, computers are creeping into every aspect of school life.
Many teachers are using computers to ease the time burden associated with
figuring grades and filling out report cards. Grading software is helping
many of them. But computerized programs for reporting grades limit the
choices for educators. Computers, to date, are not able to take into consideration
some of the more subjective elements of grading.
Read More About
It!
Computer grading programs are easing grade-keeping burdens
for some teachers. Read more about it in these related stories
from the Education World archives.
*
Grading Software: Sorting Through the Choices Education
World writer Sherril Steele-Carlin weeds through the grading
software choices so you don't have to! Included are links
to the best grading software online and tips for choosing
the right software to meet your needs!
*
Teacher-Created Web Sites Link Home and School -- Virtually!
Education World technology editor Linda Starr shares the stories
of teachers who have seen the possibilities for using the
Web to connect to parents! She includes tips for making connections
to parents on school and classroom Web sites!
The Hermiston
(Oregon) School District piloted a new electronic report card program
last year. The program is based on the state's benchmarks, according to
John Sipp, a Title 1 teacher in the system. A committee designed the format
for the program and then translated it into an online, interactive format.
"There are still a few teachers who are not comfortable with the new
format, and there were some parents who weren't sure of it, but with some
preliminary explanations, most have adapted well to the new report card,"
Sipp told Education World.
"The major advantage of the new card is that it makes grading more objective,
and thus more of a snapshot of where the student is in comparison with
the state standards," said Sipp. The report card is based on a curriculum
continuum that outlines on a quarterly basis each of the skills that students
are working on, he added.
The report cards are completed electronically. The teacher just logs
on to the server and types in a password to view a list of students linked
to grade cards that are ready to be marked. Not only is it faster than
the old method, Sipp said, but it also has the advantage of being easy
to find at any time. No more losing the cards in your desk drawer!
Administrators like the new electronic report card because they have
easy access to all students' report cards at any time. The cards are part
of a network, so individual student information can be downloaded from
the student's school or state records. That saves a lot of typing for
the school secretary or teacher.
Though the new system might have added a little work for teachers, Sipp
said, it has helped many teachers focus on what needs to be taught.
"With the push toward statewide standards, a change in the way grades
are reported is inevitable. We can either fight the change or work with
it to give our students the best chance of meeting the standards," he
said.
SMOOTH TRANSITION
Julie Litton, a fourth-grade teacher in Indiana, made a smooth transition
to a narrative report card. In the 1996-97 school year, she phased out
the traditional reporting in language arts only. The experience, she said,
has been less than earthshaking.
"When I explain the reporting system to new fourth-grade parents, they
are not taken aback, but take the change in stride," she said, also citing
an internal survey that shows more than 90 percent of parents favor the
summary style of report card.
However, she joked that she "cringes and goes into deep depression"
when it is time to do report cards. It takes her on average about 24 hours
to put the information into the computer and get it printed.
Litton said even though traditional grades are very general, if parents
want to see what work the student has done, they can follow along on a
nightly basis with their child's homework to find out.
"I really don't see how summary evaluation will help keep children from
falling through the cracks," added Litton. "Someone who reads the summary
will still have to become involved. Schools are going to have to provide
for those students who do not qualify for special services. Any type of
reporting system is not going to be a panacea for deliverance of services
to special needs children."
SUCCESSFUL WHEN EVERYONE IS INVOLVED
Grant Wiggins, an educational consultant at
Relearning by Design, has found the most successful transformations
of the report card occur when all the stakeholders are consulted on the
decisions.
"Too many report card changes focus on what teachers want, but the card
is for parents," Wiggins told Education World. "Establishing focus groups
and looking at alternatives -- that is the best strategy."
Wiggins believes districts need both a summary and a traditional report
on students' progress.
"Everyone recognizes the disconnect between modern assessment, standards,
and report cards -- report cards haven't kept pace with state and national
standards and the use of rubrics," he added. "Furthermore, grades without
some standards for grading represent nothing stable or clear -- they don't
explain what the student did to earn the grade."
What is the point of giving a grade if the children are not developing
at the same rate and starting from the same place? Wiggins wonders.
"It is much better to report where students stand on developmental continua,
with either comments or symbols stating where the performance stands in
terms of grade level standards. We care as much about progress as achievement
in younger grades," he added.
Wiggins believes people favor traditional grading because it provides
a "bottom line" for their children.
"All report cards are meant to provide feedback and guidance. Anything
that advances both is a good thing. But the student is a different audience
than parents -- we need to make sure reporting reflects this," he said.
Wiggins does not think a summary type of report card will stop future
students from falling through the cracks. "The reporting process cannot
help kids. Only better teaching, coaching, and counseling can do that,"
he said.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Report
Card Reform and
Report Card Redux These articles from the American Association of
School Administrators review alternative ways of reporting student progress,
ways that usually find favor among educators but create doubts among
parents.