How I Eliminated (Almost) All Grading Problems In My Classroom
by Terry Heick
Grading problems are one of the most urgent bugaboos of good teaching.
Grading can take an extraordinary amount of time. It can also demoralize students, get them in trouble at home, or keep them from getting into a certain college.
It can demoralize teachers, too. If half the class is failing, any teacher worth their salt will take a long, hard look at themselves and their craft.
So over the years as a teacher, I cobbled together a kind of system that was, most crucially, student-centered. It was student-centered in the sense that it was designed for them to promote understanding, grow confidence, take ownership, and protect themselves from themselves when they needed it.
Some of this approach was covered inĀ Why Did That Student Fail? A Diagnostic Approach To Teaching. See below for the systemāreally, just a few rules I created that, while not perfect, went a long way towards eliminating the grading problems in my classroom.
Which meant students werenāt paralyzed with fear when I asked them to complete increasingly complex tasks they were worried were beyond their reach. It also meant that parents werenāt breathing down my neck āabout that C-ā they saw on Infinite Campus, and if both students and parents are happy, the teacher can be happy, too.
How I Eliminated (Almost) All Grading Problems In My Classroom
1. I chose what to grade carefully.
When I first started teaching, I thought in terms of āassignmentsā and ātests.ā Quizzes were also a thing.
But eventually I started thinking instead in terms of āpracticeā and āmeasurement.ā All assessment should be formative, and the idea of āsummative assessmentā makes as much sense as āone last teeth cleaning.ā
The big idea is what I often call a āclimate of assessment,ā where snapshots of Ā student understanding and progress are taken in organic, seamless, and non-threatening ways. Assessment is ubiquitous and always-on.
A āmeasurementā is only one kind of assessment, and even the word implies āchecking in on your growthā in the same way you measure a childās vertical growth (height) by marking the threshold in the kitchen. This type of assessment provides both the student and teacher a markerādata, if you insistāof where the student āisā at that moment with the clear understanding that another such measurement will be taken soon, and dozens and dozens of opportunities to practice in-between.
Be very careful with what you grade, because it takes time and mental energyāboth finite resources crucial to the success of any teacher. If you donāt have a plan for the data before you give the assessment, donāt give it, and certainly donāt call it a quiz or a test.
2. I designed work to be āpublishedā
I tried to make student productsāwriting, graphic organizers, podcasts, videos, projects, and moreāat the very least visible to the parents of students. Ideally, this work would also be published to peers for feedback and collaboration, and then to the public at large to provide some authentic function in a community the student cares about.
By making student work public (insofar as it promoted student learning while protecting any privacy concerns), the assessment is done in large part by the people the work is intended for. Itās authentic, which makes the feedback loop quicker and more diverse than one teacher could ever hope to make it.
What this system loses in expert feedback that teacher might be able to give (though nothing says it canāt both be made public and benefit from teacher feedback), it makes up for in giving students substantive reasons to do their best work, correct themselves, and create higher stands for quality than your rubric outlined.
3. I made a rule:Ā No Fs and no zeroes. A, B, C, or āIncompleteā
First, I created a kind of no-zero policy. Easier said than done depending on who you are and what you teach and what the school āpolicyā is and so on. The idea here, though, is to keep zeroes from mathematically ruining a studentās āfinal grade.ā
I try to explain to students that a grade should reflect understanding, not their ability to successfully navigate the rules and bits of gamification stuffed into most courses and classrooms. If a student receives a D letter grade, it should be because they have demonstrated an almost universal inability to master any content, not because they got As and Bs on most work they cared about but Cs or lower on the work they didnāt, and with a handful of zeroes thrown in for work they didnāt complete ended up with a D or an F.
Another factor at work here is marking work with an A, B, C, or āIncomplete.ā Put another way, if the student didnāt at least achieve the average mark of C, which should reflect average understanding of a given standard or topic, I would mark it āIncomplete,ā give them clear feedback on how it could be improved, and then require them to do so.
4. I went over missing assignments frequently.
Simple enough. I had a twitter feed of all āmeasurementsā (work they knew that counted towards their grade), so they didnāt have to ask āwhat they were missingā (though they did anyway). I also wrote it on the board (I had a huge whiteboard that stretched across the front of the classroom).
5. I created alternative assessments.
Early on in teaching, I noticed students saying, in different ways, that they āgot it but donāt all the way get it.ā Or that they believed that they did, in fact, āget itā but not the way the assessment required (reminder: English Lit/ELA is a highly conceptual content area aside of the skills of literacy itself).
So Iād create an alternative assessment to check and see. Was the assessment getting in the wayāobscuring more than it revealed? Why beat my head against the wall explaining the logistics of an assignment or intricacies of a question when they assignment and the question werenāt at all the points? These were just āthingsā I used the way a carpenter uses tools.
Sometimes itās easier to just grab a different tool.
Iād also ask students to create their own assessments at times. Show me you understand. It didnāt always work the way youād expect, but I got some of the most insightful and creative expression Iāve ever seen from students using this approach. As with most things, it just depended on the student.
6. I taught through micro-assignments.
Exit slips were one of the the greatest things that ever happened to my teaching. I rarely used them as āexit ticketsā to be able to leave the classroom, but I did use them almost daily. Why?
They gave me a constant stream of data for said āclimate of assessment,ā and it was daily and fresh and disarming to students because they knew it was quick and if they failed, another one would be coming soon.
It was a āstudent-centeredā practice because it protected them. They had so many opportunities and, math-wise, so many scores that unless they failed everything every day, they wouldnāt āfailā at all. And if they were,
I could approach a single standard or topic from a variety of angles and complexities and Bloomās levels and so on, which often showed that the student that ādidnāt get itā last week more likely just ādidnāt getā my question.
In other words, they hadnāt failed my assessment; my assessment had failed them because it had failed to uncover what they, in fact, knew.
7. I used diagnostic teachingĀ
You can read more about diagnostic teaching but the general idea is that I had a clear sequence I used that I communicated very clearly to the students and their families. It usually took the first month or two for everyone to become comfortable with it all, but once I did, grading problems were *almost* completely eliminated. Problems still surfaced but with a system in place, it was much easier to identify exactly what went wrong and why and communicate it all to the stakeholders involved in helping support children.