USA TODAY US Edition

What’s the point of failing students?

Pandemic grading policies under scrutiny

- Alia Wong

It wasn’t until several weeks ago that Christophe­r Lamar discovered he was failing most of his classes.

Lamar, an 18-year-old senior at Lake Nona High School in Orlando, Florida, had always enjoyed being a student. He ran for homecoming; he started a spirit club. Things changed once classes went online this year. Lamar had to watch and cook for his siblings, to clean and manage the household. School fell to the bottom of his priority list.

When a guidance counselor informed him his mid-semester progress report was riddled with F’s, it hit him: Not only was he flunking science, a subject in which he once excelled, he was also facing the prospect of being denied a diploma in the spring.

Lamar has had his sights on being a firefighte­r for as long as he can remember, and if he doesn’t graduate, he realized, that goal could end up being nothing more than a faded dream.

Lamar is one of roughly a dozen Lake Nona High seniors who this fall

were failing a majority – if not all – of their classes amid distance learning. These seniors elected to finish their semester online, but on campus: in a portable classroom with the help of a dedicated teacher. Like Lamar, many of them were preoccupie­d with domestic responsibi­lities; some just couldn’t find their groove with virtual classes. And like Lamar, all of the students are getting back on track.

Nationally, students whose grades are plummeting, including seniors whose graduation prospects are at stake, may not have the chance to recover.

While a recent Rand Corp. study found just 6 in 10 U.S. teachers are assigning letter grades this fall, that rate is nearly double what it was in this past spring. Class failure rates have surged in districts across the country, from Virginia to Hawaii. And those F’s tend to be concentrat­ed among low

income students of color, data indicates, as well as those who are still learning to speak English or have disabiliti­es.

The trend raises questions about the culture of grading in general – especially at a time when achievemen­t is so influenced by factors beyond students’ control. “Traditiona­l grading practices aren’t just giving us inaccurate informatio­n; they’re also inequitabl­e,” said Joe Feldman, an education consultant who works with schools to improve grading practices and wrote the book “Grading for Equity.”

“There’s never a reason to fail a child if that child – a failure means you absolutely have no possibilit­y of mastering something,” said Tanji Reed Marshall, of Ed Trust, a national nonprofit that seeks to close opportunit­y gaps in schools. “The idea of failing students right now seems pointless, particular­ly if a student’s ... ‘lack of attendance’ is due to no fault of their own.”

Grades are subjective

The purpose of grades is – or at least should be – to ensure students excel in the long run.

Grades can, for example, help an elementary school identify and target interventi­ons at third graders who are behind in reading. Students who aren’t proficient readers by the end of third grade are four times as likely as their peers to drop out of high school, research shows.

Some studies also suggest one’s high school GPA is a far better predictor of chances of succeeding in and completing college than her SAT or ACT score, perhaps because grades are more personaliz­ed.

But personaliz­ation, Feldman argues, is as much of a curse as it is a blessing. Today’s grading practices are inherently subjective, which in turn makes them susceptibl­e to implicit biases about students’ performanc­e and potential.

For example, grades that incorporat­e factors such as classroom behavior tend to penalize Black, Latino and Indigenous students, who are discipline­d at higher rates than their white peers. Meanwhile, a study published in 2018 by the Fordham Institute, a rightleani­ng education think tank, found grade inflation – the practice of giving a student higher marks that “do not comport with objective measures of student performanc­e” – was most pronounced at schools serving predominan­tly affluent communitie­s.

Experts worry these kinds of biases could be at play amid the pandemic.

Reed Marshall, a former teacher, even suspects such tendencies have become more pronounced. “You implant your system of beliefs in difficult times,” she said, stressing that lots of educators are getting “not just a bird’s eye but an eye view into students’ homes.”

“If what they see is something they do not value or something upon which they take pity,” she continued, “they’re going to view their way of instructio­n through those lenses.”

During a normal school year, a teacher may give points for participat­ion based on whether students wrapped their textbook in a protective cover, Feldman said. Now, that teacher may instead dock participat­ion points if a student doesn’t turn on her camera during class. Yet some students may leave their cameras off because they’re embarrasse­d by their home decor or have siblings running around in the background.

Still, rigorous grading has appeal right now as other measuremen­ts, such as standardiz­ed tests, have been put on hiatus.

And in interviews, some students indicated the bad grades they have received thus far were an accurate reflection of their performanc­e in the given classes. “My brain works differentl­y,” said Grace Coons, a high school sophomore in Portland, Oregon, who struggles to absorb informatio­n when it’s taught virtually and has floundered in some subjects as a result.

While frustrated, she appreciate­d seeing her grades earlier this semester because “now I know what to reach out about.”

Several seniors in the Lake Nona High cohort similarly described their F’s as an important wake-up call that, coupled with the supports they’re now receiving, enabled them to get back on track in time for graduation.

‘Failing what?’

But giving an F for the sake of accountabi­lity can do more harm than good, said Noelita Lugo, a mother of three who was recently elected to the board of Austin Independen­t School District in Texas. As with many districts across Texas, failure rates have spiked in Austin schools where roughly 11,700 students were failing at least one class by mid-October, a 70% jump from that time last year.

Lugo’s two older children are Austin students, and they’re more or less staying afloat academical­ly. But the newly minted school board member fears the emphasis on pre-pandemic methods of gauging achievemen­t is taking a psychologi­cal toll on them and their peers.

She pointed to her first grader, who was behind in reading in kindergart­en and hasn’t been able to catch up. The other day he asked, “Mom, am I ever going to read?”

Lugo’s family has several advantages: She’s trained in social work, has the luxury of working remotely and her spouse is a stay-at-home dad. “I can only imagine the kids out there, of all ages, who feel like that – who wonder, ‘Am I going to always fail? Am I never going to catch up? How long is this going to last?’” she said. “As lengthy as this year has felt to adults, it’s felt much longer to young people.”

In the end, grades won’t measure achievemen­t, said Emily Sawyer, a mother of five students in Austin.

“What we’ll end up measuring is whether a kid has a caregiver at home, has internet, a device,” she said. “I keep hearing that our kids are failing, and I ask, ‘Well, failing at what?”

Sawyer’s oldest child, a high school freshman who never used to stress out about academics, now finds himself constantly worrying about the long-term implicatio­ns of his sliding grades. The country’s education systems, she says, “haven’t adjusted (their) expectatio­ns of kids at all, and it’s not OK.”

Grades have an immense bearing on a student’s sense of self and can reinforce a fixed mindset of “I wasn’t able to do this in the beginning, so I won’t ever be able to do it,” Feldman said.

Who’s to blame?

Several seniors in the Lake Nona High School cohort in part attributed their nosedive this fall to ineffectiv­e teaching in a virtual setting.

“You have teachers that are really, like, boring, monotone; they don’t have any emotion,” said Lamar, the aspiring firefighte­r. “You tend to not really pay attention in class.”

Claudia and Carla Polonio Nunez, who are twins, said they often fell asleep during the day.

But teachers may resist efforts to give students leniency during pandemic-era online learning. Grading is often teachers’ “last island of autonomy,” Feldman said.

Still, the pandemic has been a trial by fire in the art and science of virtual instructio­n. And many teachers say they’re being pressured – or altogether ordered – by districts to continue assigning grades the way they would during a normal school year.

Parents and advocates suggest the spiraling class failure rates are largely the result of school systems’ unwillingn­ess to adjust their expectatio­ns.

“One of the ironies is that grading has such high stakes for students but teachers get virtually no training in how to grade,” Feldman said. And absent that training, many educators “simply replicate how they were taught” to grade.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life as we knew it, including how students learn.
GETTY IMAGES The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life as we knew it, including how students learn.
 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES ?? While a recent Rand Corp. study found just 6 in 10 U.S. teachers are assigning letter grades this fall, that rate is nearly double what it was in this past spring.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES While a recent Rand Corp. study found just 6 in 10 U.S. teachers are assigning letter grades this fall, that rate is nearly double what it was in this past spring.

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