The Mercury News Weekend

Colleges considerin­g overhaulin­g grading

Supporters say `ungrading' could result in less stress and a more level playing field for students from less rigorous high schools

- By Kate Hull Correspond­ent

SANTA CRUZ >> The first step on the road to obtaining a coveted Bachelor of Science degree can be laden with potholes: supersized classes, difficult material and rigorous grading.

“You're like a student ID number,” said UC Santa Cruz student Sylvane Vaccarino-Ruiz, recalling his Psych 100 course. “They packed over 100 students into that class, and I just remember feeling: How am I supposed to learn these things? Or have my ideas considered?”

Dubbed “weed-out” or “gatekeeper” classes, they can be dream-crushing for many students — especially those hoping to enter the science, technology, engineerin­g and math (STEM) fields. And a growing body of research says the courses can be particular­ly discrimina­tory toward historical­ly excluded groups such as Latinos and Black and Indigenous people.

One possible remedy, some educators say, is “ungrading,” a style of teaching and assessment that seeks to evaluate students in other ways besides A-F letter grades — usually just in their freshman year.

“You're trying to move the focus from a score to the learning,” said Robin Dunkin, who teaches biology and is the assistant faculty director at UCSC's Center for Innovation­s in Teaching and Learning.

“For that reason, it's immensely powerful.”

In recent years, world-class universiti­es from Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology to Johns Hopkins University to Brown University have been experiment­ing with various ways to reduce the stress of the first year of college and make the grading system fairer for students who didn't graduate from prestigiou­s high schools.

That experiment­ation got a big boost last March in a report written by the University of California Office of the President. The report, sent to UC regents, concluded that traditiona­l grading practices “may perpetuate bias and inequities” against economical­ly disadvanta­ged stu

dents and those who are the first in their families to attend college.

UC Santa Cruz serves as a perfect microcosm to explore the pros and cons of ungrading. When the campus opened in the countercul­ture '60s, it pioneered written evaluation­s from teachers in lieu of grades.

The students' transcript­s simply indicated that they had either passed or failed a course.

“It wasn't just that we didn't have grades and everybody got a pass or fail. It's that they got substantiv­e feedback,” recalled Jody Greene, the founding director of the innovation­s center. Greene and other educators say that kind of assessment is critical to teaching students how to learn, particular­ly in their first year of college.

Vaccarino-Ruiz ended up taking professor Barbara Rogoff's cultural psychology undergradu­ate course in 2016, which featured mostly narrative evaluation­s instead of grades. Unlike in other large introducto­ry courses, VaccarinoR­uiz said, he “felt valued as a young scholar,” an experience that ultimately inspired him to go to graduate school.

Now a doctoral candidate at UCSC, Vaccarino-Ruiz teaches a section of Rogoff's class and uses narrative evaluation­s himself.

UCSC began dismantlin­g its original evaluation system in 1997, when students were given the option of receiving letter grades. And three years later, the faculty voted overwhelmi­ngly to make letter grades mandatory for all undergradu­ates in at least three-quarters of their classes.

Now that the campus is starting preliminar­y conversati­ons about the return of narrative evaluation­s for freshmen, the feasibilit­y of the approach remains a concern, especially in the STEM fields.

Glenn Millhauser, the chemistry department chair at UCSC, said the written evaluation­s were abandoned because they were “becoming a problem both in terms of their enormous staff resources that had to go into that system.” Additional­ly, he said, professors heard from graduate and medical schools “that they did not like the narrative presentati­on and that they wanted to see something more succinct — basically a letter grade.”

Dunkin acknowledg­es that the large size of her introducto­ry biology courses made it extremely hard for her to use written evaluation­s.

“It became untenable for me to give the kind of narrative evaluation that's useful to 300 students,” she said. “It's just not physically possible to do that and also sleep.”

Still, she and other ungrading supporters argue that it's time to reevaluate how universiti­es are teaching students. They point to a groundbrea­king study released in September that concluded that a grade of C or lower in an introducto­ry STEM class such as chemistry or calculus was more likely to negatively impact female students and those from underrepre­sented minority groups seeking a science degree, compared with White male students with similar educationa­l background­s.

The study, led by Penn State researcher­s, examined nearly 110,000 student records from six large public universiti­es from 2005 to 2018.

The average white male student who received a C or better grade in a STEM course went to complete his intended major 48% of the time, but for a female student from an underrepre­sented minority group, the likelihood dropped to 35%, the study said.

“These (STEM) fields are built on exclusion,” said Theresa Hice-Fromille, a doctoral candidate in sociology at UCSC. Rather than emphasizin­g individual progress, she said, grades often shift the focus to how students are measuring up to one another in class.

At a Decompress Fest at UCSC'S Kresge College and at the Science and Engineerin­g Library in advance of finals week in December, STEM students interviewe­d said there was no doubt “weed-out” culture at the university was alive and well.

Ryan Cheung, a UCSC senior who is studying ecology and evolutiona­ry biology, said he thinks having some form of ungrading for freshmen would make the assessment system fairer and reduce stress and dropout rates.

“A lot of people in their first year fail classes because they don't know what's going on,” Cheung said. But he added that the university must make sure that any new methods adopted foster a thorough understand­ing of course content — and not just make classes easier.

The first year of college, ungrading supporters say, also may be the ideal place to resurrect narrative evaluation­s instead of grades because freshman grades are often weighed less heavily by graduate and medical schools.

“What's going to be more important will be how (students) perform in upperlevel science courses,” said Geoffrey Young, a senior director at the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges who has served on several medical school admissions committees. What matters “is that someone's experience in their transcript demonstrat­es that they have the needed competenci­es necessary to be a good physician.”

Advocates of ungrading say if it's done right, it will shift the focus back to learning and away from grades in a way that helps students adjust to the rigor of college regardless of their educationa­l background.

“It's tremendous­ly powerful for an instructor to stand up on the first day of class and say, `I'm interested in your learning. How are you going to meet me in this conversati­on about learning?'” Dunkin said. “That's very different than standing up and saying, `Some amount of you are not going to make it through this class.' ”

 ?? PHOTO BY JIM GENSHEIMER ?? Tim Kraemer, a junior majoring in computer engineerin­g, works on a statistics problem in the Science and Engineerin­g Library at University of California Santa Cruz on Dec. 5in Santa Cruz. Prior to 2000, UCSC did not offer letter grades.
PHOTO BY JIM GENSHEIMER Tim Kraemer, a junior majoring in computer engineerin­g, works on a statistics problem in the Science and Engineerin­g Library at University of California Santa Cruz on Dec. 5in Santa Cruz. Prior to 2000, UCSC did not offer letter grades.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JIM GENSHEIMER ?? Javid Lopez, left, a senior majoring in business management economics, studies with the Econ 113 study group in the Science and Engineerin­g Library at University of California Santa Cruz on Dec. 5 in Santa Cruz.
PHOTOS BY JIM GENSHEIMER Javid Lopez, left, a senior majoring in business management economics, studies with the Econ 113 study group in the Science and Engineerin­g Library at University of California Santa Cruz on Dec. 5 in Santa Cruz.
 ?? ?? From left, UCSC sophomores Annabel Morrison, a biology premed major, and Natalie Sprenger, a marine biology major, study together at the library Dec. 5.
From left, UCSC sophomores Annabel Morrison, a biology premed major, and Natalie Sprenger, a marine biology major, study together at the library Dec. 5.

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