Skip to main content
Location: United States |  Change Location
0
Male flipping through Corwin book

Hands-on, Practical Guidance for Educators

From math, literacy, equity, multilingual learners, and SEL, to assessment, school counseling, and education leadership, our books are research-based and authored by experts on topics most relevant to what educators are facing today.

 

Grading for Equity - Book Cover
Share:
Bestseller!

Grading for Equity

What It Is, Why It Matters, and How It Can Transform Schools and Classrooms

By: Joseph Charles Feldman

Crack open the grading conversation

Here at last—and none too soon—is a resource that reveals how grading practices that are accurate, bias-resistant, and motivational will improve learning, minimize grade inflation, reduce failure rates, and become a lever for creating stronger teacher-student relationships and more caring classrooms.

Inside you’ll find

  • A critical historical backdrop, describing how our inherited system of grading was originally set up as a sorting mechanism to provide or deny opportunity, control students, and endorse a “fixed mindset”
  • A summary of the research on motivation and equitable teaching and learning
  • Specific grading practices that are more equitable, along with teacher examples, strategies to solve common hiccups and concerns, and evidence of effectiveness

Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9781506391571
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2018
  • Page Count: 296
  • Publication date: October 01, 2018

Price: $39.95

Price: $39.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

For Instructors

Request Exam Copy

By selecting the request for exam copy above, you will be redirected to our parent site, Sage Publishing, to process your inspection copy request.  Thank you.

Description

Description

“Joe Feldman shows us how we can use grading to help students become the leaders of their own learning and lift the veil on how to succeed. . . . This must-have book will help teachers learn to implement improved, equity-focused grading for impact.”

—Zaretta Hammond,

Author of Culturally Responsive Teaching & The Brain

Crack open the grading conversation

Here at last—and none too soon—is a resource that delivers the research base, tools, and courage to tackle one of the most challenging and emotionally charged conversations in today’s schools: our inconsistent grading practices and the ways they can inadvertently perpetuate the achievement and opportunity gaps among our students.

With Grading for Equity, Joe Feldman cuts to the core of the conversation, revealing how grading practices that are accurate, bias-resistant, and motivational will improve learning, minimize grade inflation, reduce failure rates, and become a lever for creating stronger teacher-student relationships and more caring classrooms. Essential reading for schoolwide and individual book study or for student advocates, Grading for Equity provides

  • A critical historical backdrop, describing how our inherited system of grading was originally set up as a sorting mechanism to provide or deny opportunity, control students, and endorse a “fixed mindset” about students’ academic potential—practices that are still in place a century later
  • A summary of the research on motivation and equitable teaching and learning, establishing a rock-solid foundation and a “true north” orientation toward equitable grading practices
  • Specific grading practices that are more equitable, along with teacher examples, strategies to solve common hiccups and concerns, and evidence of effectiveness
  • Reflection tools for facilitating individual or group engagement and understanding

As Joe writes, “Grading practices are a mirror not just for students, but for us as their teachers.” Each one of us should start by asking, “What do my grading practices say about who I am and what I believe?” Then, let’s make the choice to do things differently . . . with Grading for Equity as a dog-eared reference.

 

 

 

 


Key features

(1) Describes how to implement equitable grading practices that have been tested and refined by teacher, while, at the same time, helps administrators, teachers, and advocates navigate the tricky political and emotional challenges of an equitable grading initiative. 

(2) Provides the reader with a deep understanding of the critical weaknesses of our current grading system and proven strategies to make grading more accurate, fair, and supportive of every student’s learning.

(3) Richly-detailed examples bridge the gap between theory and practice.

(4) Reflective prompts embedded across the book  help individual readers and teams process, synthesize, reflect, and connect with the material.

(5)  Practices have been used by hundreds of teachers across a variety of contexts including classrooms serving low-income and higher-income students, and in elementary, middle and high schools.  

(6) The author has collected quantitative and qualitative data that have generated an evidence-based demonstration of the positive impact of these practices on student achievement (changes in D/F and A rates, and stronger correlation to external measures), classroom environments, and teachers’ sense of efficacy.

Author(s)

Author(s)

Joseph Charles Feldman photo

Joseph Charles Feldman

Joe Feldman has worked in education at the local and national levels for over twenty years in both charter and district school contexts, and as a teacher, principal, and district administrator. He began his career as a high school English and American history teacher in Atlanta Public Schools and was the founding principal of a charter high school in Washington, DC. He has been the Director of Charter Schools for New York City Department of Education, the Director of K–12 Instruction in Union City, California, and was a Fellow to the Chief of Staff for U.S. Secretary of Education Richard Riley. Joe is currently CEO of Crescendo Education Group (crescendoedgroup.org), a consulting organization that partners with schools and districts to help teachers use improved and more equitable grading and assessment practices. Joe graduated from Stanford University, Harvard Graduate School of Education, and NYU Law School. He is the author of several articles on grading, assessment, and equity, and the author of Teaching Without Bells: What We Can Learn from Powerful Practice in Small Schools (Paradigm). He lives in Oakland, California with his wife and two children.
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


PROLOGUE: MALLORY’S DILEMMA


PART I: FOUNDATIONS


CHAPTER 1. WHAT MAKES GRADING SO DIFFICULT TO TALK ABOUT (AND EVEN HARDER TO CHANGE)?

     Grading as Identity

     Grading and Our “Web of Belief”

     Who Is This Book For?

     Blending the Technical and Theoretical

     How Is This Book Organized?

     A Final Word

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 2. A BRIEF HISTORY OF GRADING

     The Twentieth Century Context

     Impact on Schools

     Grading in the Twentieth Century

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

PART II: THE CASE FOR CHANGE: HOW TRADITIONAL GRADING THWARTS EFFECTIVE AND EQUITABLE TEACHING AND LEARNING


CHAPTER 3. HOW TRADITIONAL GRADING STIFLES RISK-TAKING AND SUPPORTS THE “COMMODITY OF GRADES”

     Risk-Taking, Trust, and the Teacher–Student Relationship

     The “Commodity of Grades” and Extrinsic Motivation

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 4. TRADITIONAL GRADING HIDES INFORMATION, INVITES BIASES, AND PROVIDES MISLEADING INFORMATION

     Traditional Grading Evaluates Both a Student’s Content Knowledge as Well as Their Behaviors, and Invites Subjectivity and Bias

     Implicit Bias and Traditional Grading

     The “Omnibus” Grade: A Barrel-ful of Information in a Thimble-Size Container

     A Tale of Two Students: Tangela and Isabel

     Grade Hacks

     The Impact of Variable and Unreliable Grading

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 5. TRADITIONAL GRADING DEMOTIVATES AND DISEMPOWERS

     Disengagement and Disempowerment

     Motivating Students to Do the Wrong Thing

     So Where Do We Go From Here?

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 6. A NEW VISION OF GRADING

     Supporting the Pillars: Coherence

     A Measured Vision

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

PART III: EQUITABLE GRADING PRACTICES


CHAPTER 7. PRACTICES THAT ARE MATHEMATICALLY ACCURATE

     The Zero

     The 0-100-Percentage Scale: Early Use and Enduring Flaws

     The 0–100 Scale’s Orientation Toward Failure

     Minimum Grading

     The 0–4 Grading Scale

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 8. PRACTICES THAT ARE MATHEMATICALLY ACCURATE (CONTINUED)

     The Problems With Averaging

     Weighting More Recent Performance

     Examining the Group Grade

     Encouraging Productive Group Work Without a Group Grade

     Our Accuracy Pillar: A Final Thought

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 9. PRACTICES THAT VALUE KNOWLEDGE, NOT ENVIRONMENT OR BEHAVIOR

     Examining Extra Credit

     If the Work Is Important, Require It; If It’s Not, Don’t Include It in the Grade

     Grading the Work, Not the Timing of the Work

     What’s the Alternative to Lowering Grades for Late Work?

     Alternative (Non-Grade) Consequences for Cheating

     Excluding “Participation” and “Effort” From the Grade

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 10. PRACTICES THAT VALUE KNOWLEDGE, NOT ENVIRONMENT OR BEHAVIOR (CONTINUED)

     Homework

     The Impact of Including Homework in the Grade: Student Voices and Copying

     Reframing Homework

     Grades Based Entirely on Summative Assessment Performance

     Grades to Teach Students, Not to Control Them

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 11. PRACTICES THAT SUPPORT HOPE AND A GROWTH MINDSET

     Our Understanding of Motivation

     Grades and Their Impact on Student Motivation

     The Role of Mistakes in Learning

     Minimum Grading (A Revisit)

     Renaming Grades

     Retakes and Redos

     Retakes: Frequent Approaches

     Retakes: Common Concerns

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 12. PRACTICES THAT “LIFT THE VEIL”

     The Veils in Our Schools, and “Hostile Attributional Bias”

     Rubrics: What Are They, and Why?

     Scoring Rubrics and Grade Book Entries

     Using Rubrics to Empower Students

     “Lifting the Veil” for Tests: The Opacity of Points

     Beyond Points: Standards Scales

     The Effects of Standards Transparency

     Standards-Based Grade Books

     Veils, Rubrics, and the “Real World”

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 13. PRACTICES THAT BUILD “SOFT SKILLS” WITHOUT INCLUDING THEM IN THE GRADE

     “Soft Skills”

     Grading as Feedback

     Preparation for the “Real World”

     Whose “Real World” Are We Talking About?

     Connecting Soft Skills to Academic Success

     Two Grades: Academic and “Soft Skills”

     The Twenty-First Century’s Soft Skill: Self-Regulation

     Creating a Community of Feedback

     Student Trackers and Goal-Setting

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

CHAPTER 14. PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: NICK AND CATHY

     Nick: Rethinking Assessments: Getting Away From the Games, and Focusing on Learning

     Cathy: A Clearer Vision of Excellence

     Summary of Concepts / Questions to Consider

EPILOGUE: A RETURN TO MALLORY’S SCHOOL


BIBLIOGRAPHY


INDEX


Reviews

Reviews