December 2013: RPS Book Study Reflection
The biggest takeaway for me has been the necessity for us to be very specific with our grading / reporting measures. In particular, I think best grading practices not only report averages; but they also include a detailed look into the student's current level of mastery. There were several chapters that referenced ways in which to improve one's specificity of grading, but I felt Fix # 11: "Don't rely only on the mean; consider other measures of central tendency and use professional judgment" summed it up best. The author's viewpoint was that when grades are merely reported through the use of a mean score, outlier scores (high and low) are overemphasized and they can distort the final grade. He also went on to say that grading should be a determination and not just a mathematical calculation. In short, the student's scores may report one thing, but you as a professional educator will need look beyond and use your best judgment in determining a final grade. A quote that comes to mind is, "Whenever I hear statistics being quoted I am reminded of the statistician who drowned while wading across a river with an average depth of three feet." (McMann, 2003, n.p.)
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