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Standards Based Grading. How is it different? Traditional Grade for each assignment Grade may accidentally be focused more on one concept than another,

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Presentation on theme: "Standards Based Grading. How is it different? Traditional Grade for each assignment Grade may accidentally be focused more on one concept than another,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Standards Based Grading

2 How is it different? Traditional Grade for each assignment Grade may accidentally be focused more on one concept than another, e.g. if one concept has a project and another doesn’t Poor performance on one big assignment drastically affects grade Standards Based Grade for each standard Grade reflects mastery of each learning objectively evenly and independently No one assignment dominates the grade (except the final exam) HWProjectQuiz Test 52010 100 4139985 Obj. 1.1 Obj. 1.2 Obj. 2.1 Obj. 2.2 Obj. 2.3 10 698 6

3 Types of Standards Content Objectives Specific to each unit 60% of grade E.g. student can explain how DNA serves to pass on genetic traits Science Practices Demonstrated in all units 20% of grade E.g. student can write a proper scientific procedure A traditional final exam comprises the remaining 20% of the grade

4 How is a grade calculated? Both content & practices have a scale of mastery associated with them You get several chances to show mastery of each objective E.g. exit slip, lab, quiz, test

5 The Scale LevelLevel of MasteryGrade /10Description 4Exceptional Mastery 10 (100%) Shows ability to make connections between objectives. Uses skills and knowledge to solve novel or challenging problems. 3Mastery9 (90%) Shows skills or knowledge set forth in the learning objective 2Partial Mastery8 (80%) Student doesn’t quite meet the full learning objective 1Minimal Mastery6 (60%) Student shows the absolute minimum understanding necessary to receive passing credit No Mastery<60% Student either shows evidence that they have no mastery of the objective or student does not provide evidence

6 Calculating a Score If last score you receive is the highest, congratulations! That is your score. If last score is not the highest, that score AND the highest score you earned are averaged for your final score. You can re-assess after the unit test if you feel that your score doesn’t reflect your knowledge. This re- assess is the final score and is not averaged.

7 Example… Content Objective 1.1 Exit Slip 1.1Quiz 1.1Unit Exam 1.1FINAL SCORE Content Objective 1.1 7988.5

8 How Are Assessments Graded? Sometimes the score may be calculated from a single (usually open-ended) response based on the level of mastery demonstrated Or a part of a project or lab for example Typically, each level of mastery will be represented by one or more questions on assessments. These questions may be multiple choice, fill in the blank or free response. Level 4 questions are available on the quizzes and unit tests (not on the exit slip – focus on the basics first!)

9 Things to Notice You don’t start out with 100% in the class and then “lose points.” Generally your mastery should increase, so your grade should be able to improve throughout each unit. One bad performance can’t drag your grade down- if you demonstrate mastery later the grade isn’t affected. There are no “lab grades” or “test grades.” Rather, ANY assessment is broken up into the objectives or science practices it’s assessing.

10 Examples Lab Report Written procedure (Science Practice 2) Graphs (Science Practice 5) Conclusion (Science Practice 4) Unit Exam Question 1.1.I (Define terms) Question 1.1.II (MC) Question 1.1.III (Short answer) Question 1.1.IV (Short answer) All content objectives for the unit would be assessed at all 4 levels of mastery on a unit exam!

11 Benefits of Standards Based Grading Grade reflects your mastery of all objectives You know what you need to work on to improve your grade and are given more direct feedback More opportunities to demonstrate mastery without a bad score harming your grade

12 Caveats You are expected to show mastery all year, and as such assessments can always include objectives from earlier units You are expected to keep track of your progress on each objective. All data enters the gradebook, but you won’t have access to anything but the current score. If there is a mistake please let me know and bring the work that was incorrectly entered. A 9 is what is expected of you for each objective/science practice. A score above 9 will be difficult to obtain and will require truly exceptional mastery, meaning you are working hard to prepare yourself and make connections between topics and gain deeper understanding.


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