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Malcolm's avatar
3hEdited

Speaking as a public school educator, I really appreciate how your analysis digs into how this grade inflation is failing the kids (who are often blamed for it). I also want to make sure we are not blaming the high school teachers here- which I don’t think you do - but it’s worth spelling out the various forces driving this phenomena outside a teachers’ control:

1) Rigid and punitive school evaluation systems at the district level incentivize schools to juke their stats (accountability is good, but may district admins are mini-tyrants)

2) The huge and well funded expansion of AP-for-All, which pushes more kids into ‘college level’ classes sooner (I now routinely see kids from charters who are taking AP classes in 7th grade - huh???)

3) College admissions becoming more cutthroat and time intensive each year, driving student and parent intolerance for low grades

4) The youth mental health crisis, which has left many young people fragile and makes schools warier of giving low grades

It’s sad because AP for All is really a response to the long, sad history of how tracking has failed students. But rather than fix the root problem - that schools often had low or no expectations for students in low tracked classes - we’ve instead just fixed the optics and are serving all student less well.

I’m not sure how we get out of this given how deeply entangled all these factors are.

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Dan O’Neil's avatar

Without the SAT or ACT, the failure of UCSD to flag unprepared students at the point of college admission makes sense. But how are these students and districts going unnoticed on statewide standardized testing? Does CA not do any statewide testing anymore?

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