Blog Arthur Chiaravalli Blog Arthur Chiaravalli

We Need to Talk About Standards-based Grading

While standards-based grading purports to put the focus squarely on learning, practitioners have noted how this is not always the reality. Arthur Chiaravalli points out the ways that SBG “has at times become a stumbling block, frustrating attempts to foster cooperation, accommodate complexity, and respond to the urgent issues of our day.”

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Blog Arthur Chiaravalli Blog Arthur Chiaravalli

Can Standards-based Grading Grade Less?

Most would consider standards-based grading part of the gradeless continuum. But it has been easier to help people grade less in a traditionally graded system than in a standards-based one. Finding ways to address the ways in which SBG can become unmanageable is well worth our collective efforts.

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Blog Sherri Spelic Blog Sherri Spelic

Making Awesome the Standard

Assessment feels like something I practice on my students; something I do to, more than with them. It’s hard for me to remember a time when the struggle to get my thoughts about an education related topic onto the page felt this fraught. 

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Blog Scott Hazeu Blog Scott Hazeu

The Problem With "Measure"

Measurement requires a standard unit, a recognized standard that can be objectively applied in a context. There is no standard unit of measurement to apply to learning. A skill can be demonstrated, progress can be noted, understanding can be communicated and shared, but not reliably or validly measured.

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Blog Arthur Chiaravalli Blog Arthur Chiaravalli

Why Standards-based Grading is Not Enough

I have lately found myself becoming “tired and sick” of structures fail to account for the richness, complexity, and wonder of teaching and learning. Why standards-based learning is not enough.

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