Call & Times

Schools confront ‘off the rails’ numbers of failing grades

- By CAROLYN THOMPSON

The first report cards of the school year are arriving with many more Fs than usual in a dismal sign of the struggles students are experienci­ng with distance learning.

School districts from coast to coast have reported the number of students failing classes has risen by as many as two or three times — with English language learners and disabled and disadvanta­ged students suffering the most.

“It was completely off the rails from what is normal for us, and that was obviously very alarming,” said Erik Jespersen, principal of Oregon’s McNary High School, where 38 of grades in late October were failing, compared with 8 in normal times.

Educators see a number of factors at play Students learning from home skip assignment­s — or school altogether. Internet access is limited or inconsiste­nt, making it difficult to complete and upload assignment­s. And teachers who don’t see their students in person have fewer ways to pick up on who is falling behind, especially with many keeping their cameras off during oom sessions.

The increase in failing grades has been seen in districts of all sizes around the country.

At Jespersen’s school in the Salem-.eizer Public School district, hundreds of students initially had not just Fs, but grade scores of 0.0 , indicating they simply were not participat­ing in school at all. In New Mexico, more than 40 percent of middle and high school students were failing at least one class as of late October. In Houston, 42 of students received at least one F in the first grading period of the year. Nearly 40 of grades for high school students in St. Paul, Minnesota, were Fs, double the amount in a typical year.

In response schools have been ramping up outreach efforts, prioritizi­ng the return of struggling students for in-person learning and in some cases changing grading policies and giving students more time to complete assignment­s.

Jespersen said his school began to see grades improve after bringing groups of 300 students into the building in small cohorts to receive support from teachers, although that recently stopped because of the region’s rising coronaviru­s cases. Advisory teams increased contact with students, and teachers were asked to temporaril­y stop assigning graded homework. Parents of Hispanic students were invited for a session to learn how to access their children’s grades online.

In Charleston, South Carolina, administra­tors and teachers are raising the possibilit­y of adjusting grading the way they did in spring, where instructor­s were told to give 50s instead of 0s to make it less punitive for disengaged students, eighth-grade English teacher Jody Stallings said. “I’m an English teacher, not a math teacher, but I’ve learned zeros are very, very devastatin­g to an average,” he said.

Most of the failing grades he gives out come from missing assignment­s, not assignment­s that were turned in with a lot of wrong answers.

“ ou talk to them later and they say, C ou know I just didn’t do it. I didn’t know the answer so I just didn’t do it,’” said Stallings, who teaches most of his students in person

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