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Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast. net

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Page 1: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Making the GradeGrading Practices for

Students with Disabilities

By

Cathy Sartain Industries

[email protected]

Page 2: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Why Worry About Grading?

• LRE

• Standards based curriculum and state assessment

• District grading policies

• Litigation

Page 3: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

What Makes Grading Hard?

lack of regulatory guidancelack of regulatory guidance

“faulty” thinking

Page 4: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Doesn’t Federal Law Tell Us Everything We Need To Know?

IDEA: is silent with respect to grading issues

Section 504: prohibits discrimination in grading procedures

Page 5: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

What is Some of the Faulty Thinking?

I can’t fail a special education student

I give all my Life Skills students an 85

• The report card grade does not really mean anything

Page 6: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

The grade on the report card can’t be less than the IEP mastery level

I teach a lot in my classroom, but I can only grade the things that are on the IEP

I don’t do the grades for my sped students in my classroom, the sped teacher does

Page 7: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

I really want to do things correctly…

what guidance is there so

I don’t make mistakes?

Page 8: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

May I use a different grading system?

Only if the IEP team adopts an alternate system based on specific disability related needs

Don’t take it upon yourself to make changes outside of

an IEP Team meeting!

Page 9: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

But how do I decide?

Where is the student receiving instruction?

What is the scope of the curriculum the student is responsible for?

What is “meaningful” progress reporting?

Impact of disability on grading policies and procedures

Page 10: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

My student is receiving

accommodations in my classroom, do I modify the grade?

Do not reduce a grade merely because the student receives accommodations, or is in special education

Page 11: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Since my classroomis inclusive, I

arbitrarily weight my sped students’ grades,

this is OK, right? Of course not!!!!

But, what if we take out the word

arbitrary?

Page 12: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

It Depends!

A district may use a weighting system in which [each] course is analyzed separately and assigned a degree of difficulty based on methods of instruction and material covered(North East ISD, TX. 1995)

Page 13: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Most of my students are in general education,

can I identify as a goal, that they will make a

passing grade? Definitely not!

The mastery criteria is tied only to the skill specified in the goal

Page 14: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Are good grades on my sped students’ report cards proof that the district is providing FAPE?

• Persuasive, but not definitive

Page 15: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

What exactly does that mean?

Good grades may be powerful evidence but cannot be the only factor considered, must look at a range of evidence (teacher assessments, grades, standardized tests, etc.)

Page 16: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

If I send out IEP Progress Reports,

must I also send out Report Cards?

IDEA requires that the IEP describes how progress toward annual goal will be measured, and

When the periodic reports on progress will be provided to the parents

Page 17: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

So, we must look to Section 504 for

guidance!Section 504 tells us that:

We can’t discriminate

We must document in IEP if ARDC determines alternate grading method

Grading must be meaningful and useful

Page 18: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Can the grade be based solely on

effort?State law (TEC 28.0216): requires a teacher to assign a grade that reflects

the student’s mastery of an assignment, AND

may not require a teacher to assign a minimum grade without regard to the student’s quality of work (not on effort alone)

May allow reasonable opportunity to make up or redo assignments and tests failed

Page 19: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

If the IEP Team recommends a grading accommodation, will

that affect the graduation option?

No, graduation options are determined by rigor of content and grading is about mastery of content

Page 20: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Is it OK to identify if a sped student is

working on a modified curriculum on his report card?

Report cards are intended as a communication to parents and asterisks or other symbols or codes may be used to indicate a modification or exception to the generally applicable grading scale.

Page 21: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Well then, can we identify if a student is taking sped classes on

their transcript? We can not use a notation for the

purpose of identifying a course for students with disabilities

A transcript is generally expected to be shared with others than just the parent

Page 22: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Do we really have to include students with

disabilities on the honor roll?

Exclusion from the honor roll on a categorical basis violates Section 504 (34CFR 104.4)

However, a school district may establish eligibility standards that will recognize levels of academic excellence

Page 23: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

How about class rankings?

…….take a guess!

Can’t exclude

Can establish district guidelines for determining class ranking and apply that to all students

Page 24: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

In other words:

Grading practices need to be fair and equitable

Practices can’t be discriminatory or exclusionary

Grades need to be meaningful and useful

Page 25: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

What does that look like?

Consistent framework for making decisions on determining grades for report card

Decisions are documented in IEP

Grades are true reflection of student’s progress

Page 26: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Tell me again, what should we base our

decisions on? District policies

Impact of disability on grading policies and procedures

Place of instruction

Curriculum expectations

Page 27: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

What are my grading options?

District policies

District policies with accommodations

Alternate grading system

Page 28: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

How is this documented in the ARD paperwork?

Depends on the district’s IEP paperwork

Most often is addressed in the accommodations portion of the paperwork

May also be addressed in the deliberations (minutes)

Page 29: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

But this sounds like it could look

differently for each student?

You got it! Must be:Specific to the student

Specific to the content area

Specific to the impact of the student’s disability on the grading policies and procedures

Page 30: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

Discussed, decided and documented in the IEP meeting

Disability related

ARD committee decision

Implemented

Page 31: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

What tools can help make this happen?

Guidance for IEP Team decision making and documentation

Guidance for IEP Team selection of grading accommodation

Guidance for IEP Team development of alternate grading systems

Training, training, and training!

Page 32: Making the Grade Grading Practices for Students with Disabilities By Cathy Sartain Industries cathysartainindustries@comcast.net

The important thing to remember is that

grades for ALL students are to

meaningfully and accurately

communicate learning