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52% of US Schools have begun rolling out a new program called Equatable grading
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:40 pm
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:40 pm
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. Equitable Grading means American students will have
- Unlimited test retakes
- No zeros for missing work
- No homework, homework’s is excluded from final grades
- No late penalties
- No required participation
“In short, everyone passes and more than half of US public schools have already adopted at least one of these policies and some districts have adopted all of them.
Teachers themselves are calling it academic fraud. Meanwhile, the US already spends more per student than almost any other developed nation and our students are performing near the bottom. For example:
- American 15 year olds placed 28th out of 37 countries in math and reading and math scores just hit their lowest levels in 20 years
- In some districts, over 50% of middle school students are already three or more grade levels behind, yet they're still being pushed through the system.
Apparently, schools are implementing this to raise test scores, improve graduation rates, and close achievement gaps tied to race and income — This is the classroom version of handing out participation trophies to every kid on the field and it's not just lowering the bar, it's destroying it.”
- 52%: Schools/districts using at least one Equitable Grading policy (e.g., no zeros, retakes, or late-work leniency).
- 34%: Using 2-3 Equitable Grading policies.
- 6%: Using 4+ Equitable Grading policies (full “package” implementation).
- Higher adoption of Equitable Grading in middle schools (e.g., 55% in majority-minority middle schools) and urban/district-wide settings.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:42 pm to Placekicker
I thought we were abolishing the Dept of Education?
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:43 pm to Placekicker
That sounds stupid and will hopefully create even more young white kids who hate DEI.
This post was edited on 10/7/25 at 4:46 pm
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:45 pm to Placekicker
Take out the schools that are 80% minority or low income and those scores shoot up. In those schools 80% of the kids underperform. It’s not a school problem it’s a generational home problem.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:49 pm to Placekicker
The only counter point I have
Schools and teachers are having to try and get creative since parents don't do their jobs at home, and only seem to raise hell when teachers discipline their kids. The teachers/schools have really been handicapped in what they can do.
I imagine the thought is, unlimited retests are a way to get the kids to learn from mistakes and actually learn the material. No zero's for missing work encourage kids to do the work, even if late.
Just trying to think of all of this from the other side. As for no grade for HW, a lot of colleges do that. idea is that homework is just that, and a good way to prep for tests
Schools and teachers are having to try and get creative since parents don't do their jobs at home, and only seem to raise hell when teachers discipline their kids. The teachers/schools have really been handicapped in what they can do.
I imagine the thought is, unlimited retests are a way to get the kids to learn from mistakes and actually learn the material. No zero's for missing work encourage kids to do the work, even if late.
Just trying to think of all of this from the other side. As for no grade for HW, a lot of colleges do that. idea is that homework is just that, and a good way to prep for tests
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:49 pm to tigereye58
Not in my Economics and Government classes....ask em
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:51 pm to Placekicker
Participation trophies in public education.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:51 pm to Placekicker
Great, keep graduating dummies.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 4:52 pm to Placekicker
quote:
52% of US Schools have begun rolling out a new program called Equatable grading
52% of schools will now produce useless idiots. In other words…Dimocrats
This post was edited on 10/7/25 at 4:54 pm
Posted on 10/7/25 at 5:09 pm to Placekicker
quote:
Teachers themselves are calling it academic fraud. Meanwhile, the US already spends more per student than almost any other developed nation and our students are performing near the bottom.
Its not surprising. Look around you. Look what happened with the PPP fraud, look at the WFH fraud. We have become a nation of fraud and abuse
Posted on 10/7/25 at 5:30 pm to Placekicker
It always amuses me when Leftists go on about universal Healthcare free for everyone like the rest of the civilized world but we've had that in our schools for decades. How do we rank there?
Posted on 10/7/25 at 5:40 pm to Placekicker
quote:
Apparently, schools are implementing this to raise test scores, improve graduation rates, and close achievement gaps tied to race and income — This is the classroom version of handing out participation trophies to every kid on the field and it's not just lowering the bar, it's destroying it.”
Pretty much the same approach to "lower crime."
Just stop caring about it.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 5:43 pm to Placekicker
Government destroys everything it touches.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 5:52 pm to stuntman
quote:
Government destroys everything it touches.
BOOM!
Posted on 10/7/25 at 5:57 pm to Placekicker
quote:
American 15 year olds placed 28th out of 37 countries in math and reading and math scores just hit their lowest levels in 20 years
We’re currently doing to math what we did to reading for the past three plus decades.
Get your kid out of public schools. They’d be better off learning from YouTube videos.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 6:16 pm to Placekicker
The dumbing down of school to try and raise the bottom up is a real problem and things like this won’t help at all other than to “pass kids” who don’t learn anything.
I have a question though, many of these kids do not want to learn and/or don’t see any benefit to them to learn, and their parents either agree with that or just simply don’t care. So what is the solution? We can’t expel the bottom 20% of students, and we can’t have 15yr olds in 5th grade.
So what is the solution to this problem that a school system could actually do? Obviously the long term answer is it’s up to the parents, but there’s nothing the school system can do about that in the short term.
I have a question though, many of these kids do not want to learn and/or don’t see any benefit to them to learn, and their parents either agree with that or just simply don’t care. So what is the solution? We can’t expel the bottom 20% of students, and we can’t have 15yr olds in 5th grade.
So what is the solution to this problem that a school system could actually do? Obviously the long term answer is it’s up to the parents, but there’s nothing the school system can do about that in the short term.
This post was edited on 10/7/25 at 6:17 pm
Posted on 10/7/25 at 6:19 pm to Tiger1242
One of our very real problems is that our reading curriculum has been so bad that we have high school students who literally cannot complete basic assignments because they are functionally illiterate. And it’s not completely their fault. The system failed them by trying to teach them to read with systems and practices that didn’t work and never would.
If you were able to turn back time and teach them to read in elementary school like we should have, there would be a pronounced subset of these kids that you could successfully engage with further learning. Because they could read.
If you were able to turn back time and teach them to read in elementary school like we should have, there would be a pronounced subset of these kids that you could successfully engage with further learning. Because they could read.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 6:22 pm to the808bass
quote:
If you were able to turn back time and teach them to read in elementary school like we should have, there would be a pronounced subset of these kids that you could successfully engage with further learning. Because they could read.
So do you think doing a better job of teaching kindergartners and 1st graders to read will improve the issue many schools are facing in the next 2-5 years?
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