To Average or Not to Average? Calculating Final Grades
Let's start by tossing an idea out there.
At the end of your career, what if your retirement pay was calculated by averaging your salary from your entire career? Yes, this includes your first year where you made $30,000 and the years where the budget was frozen so you didn't get a raise the whole time, and it even includes the year where you had a major life event and were only on a half-time contract.
I imagine that wouldn't go over well.
Let's try another scenario.
You're training for a marathon. You were never much of a runner, but you finally get yourself to a spot where you can run the full thing. As you cross the finish line, the timekeeper pulls up the app you use to track your training, uses that to average your time, and then determines your final time for the marathon by using the average with your initial training times as a factor. You know, those first few runs where you could hardly hit a 14-minute pace averaged out with your final 8-minute mile pace that you just ran in the marathon.
Again, wouldn't go over well.
Okay, third time's the charm, right?
Imagine for a second that students start the year not knowing what they are supposed to have learned by the end of the year. They struggle with early assignments while they are learning. By the end, they finally understand the concepts and begin to do really well on their assessments. Then, and this is where things get ridiculous, we average out their scores from the whole course (yes, even the ones at the beginning where they got low scores), and we use that to determine their final grade.
I imagine that one would go over...well, perfectly fine. I mean, I don't even have to imagine that it would go over fine, because it actually does go over fine every single year for kids all across the school system.
Let me illustrate this a little bit more by trying to make this concrete. Below is an image of a sample grade book. Take a second to look through it.
Let's break this down a little bit, focusing specifically on how this calculates the final grade. Obviously, this uses the mean to determine the score, but look at how that impacts specific students.
Student A showed the most overall growth, and yet they ended up with one of the lowest grades. Student B showed absolutely zero growth, but they ended with the highest grade in the class. What message does this send to students? It tells students that school isn't about learning. It tells students that growth is not valuable. It tells students that where they start is more important than where they end, so if they are starting a little bit behind, they might as well not try at all.
I may be going a bit overboard, but on some level that truly is the message we are sending those students.
Look at student C and student D. Did they both end with scores of proficient or above? Absolutely, and yet one receives a failing grade while the other is just barely hanging on. Why? Because they didn't follow along as well as the rest. At its core, that's the reason. Their grade is a reflection simply of how well they do what we want them to do, not how well they learn what they need to learn. The message? Don't take risks. Don't make mistakes. Your personal life and all of the complexities around it will impact your grade more than your learning will.
I know this sounds like I'm blowing this way out of proportion. Some of your reading this are thinking, "Is he really getting this worked up about using the mean to determine course grades?"
You're damn right I am.
I am because we aren't talking about numbers. We're talking about the kids those numbers often hide. We're talking about kids those numbers often harm. We're talking about the kids who we're supposed to serve, and with this one tiny decision of how to calculate grades, we're holding kids back from their potential. Worse, we're simply holding kids back from seeing their reality and being able to celebrate it.