Grading Policies


COMMUNICATING GRADING CRITERIA

Grading must reflect what a student knows, understands, and is able to do related to the course standards.  Grades are not intended to be a consequence for student behavior.

 

GRADING and REPORTING

The high school philosophy of reporting student progress is supported by the following guidelines:

 

Formative Assessments(examples)

Checks on learning

Summative Assessments (examples)

Comprehensive assessments used to document mastery of content outcomes that may include multiple subjects within a single assignment

Homework

Class work assignments

Class participation

Teacher checklists & /anecdotal records

Notebooks

Quizzes

Constructed responses

Tests

Quizzes

Projects

Performances/demonstrations

Constructed responses

Presentations

Reports of research

Portfolios

 

Class

Minimum Number of Grades

Block

15

Non-block

12

 

Percentage

Letter Grade

 

Quality Points

93-100%

       A

4.00

90-92.9%

       A-

3.62

87-89.9%

       B+

3.38

83-86.9%

       B

3.00

80-82.9%

       B-

2.62

77-79.9%

       C+

2.38

73-76.9%

       C

2.00

70-72.9%

       C-

1.62

67-69.9%

       D+

1.38

65-66.9%

       D

1.00

50-64.9%

       F

0

 

 

MAKE-UP WORK, LATE WORK, AND RETAKES

Throughout the school year, circumstances will arise in which students need the opportunity to complete missing work or retake assignments/assessments.

Make-up Work

Late Work

Retakes

 

ACADEMIC INTEGRITY

Integrity is at the heart of a sound academic policy.  The integrity of a school course and program depends on the honest completion of student work.  Cheating and plagiarism violate the most basic understanding between a student and a teacher that a student's work is his/her own and occurs when someone takes credit for something he/she did not do.

 

 

Plagiarism is the representation of someone else's ideas, statements, or words as one's own without giving credit.  Any material used in a completed assignment that includes the words, ideas, and statements from a traditional or electronic source must be documented using a standard format such as MLA or APA.  This includes interviews, television shows, movies, computer media, and Internet sources.

 

CREDIT RECOVERY/GRADE RECOUP /GRADE REINSTATEMENT

 

Cecil County Public Schools acknowledges a need to provide high school students with various opportunities to master academic content standards through separate programs that include Credit Recovery, Grade Reinstatement, and Grade Recoup. All high school students in CCPS will have the opportunities described below as a means of passing courses.

 

Credit Recovery – Students who have passed one marking period for semester-long courses or at least two of the four marking periods for year-long courses are eligible for the CCPS Credit Recovery program. These students will complete a module of assignments that will be facilitated by school staff. Once the student has satisfactorily completed the work, the student receives a P grade for the class, and a credit is awarded. The original F on the transcript remains and is factored into the student’s overall GPA.

 

Grade Recoup – Any students who earn a 60% to a 64.9% as their final grade for a marking period are eligible to participate in the CCPS Grade Recoup program. Students are made aware of their eligibility in writing within five (5) days of the issuance of report cards. Students must then meet with their teacher(s) to identify which assignments must be completed to successfully recoup their grade. Students are given five (5) school days following the notification of their Grade Recoup status to complete the assignments. The highest marking period grade a student can earn from successfully completing Grade Recoup is a D (65%). High School Assessment (HSA) courses are not eligible for Grade Recoup, unless the student has passed the HSA requirements. (English 10 is an HSA course.)

 

Grade Reinstatement – Grade Reinstatement provides students with an opportunity to have a grade reinstated in the event that a student has failed a course due to attendance for the second or fourth marking periods. During this afterschool time (five [5] days, three [3] hours per day) students may also complete Credit Recovery and/or Grade Recoup for a course. Students working to complete assignments due to failing for attendance will have their earned grades reinstated. Students completing Credit Recovery and/or Grade Recoup will follow the same process articulated above.