Grading refers to the symbols assigned to individual pieces of student work or to composite measures of student performance on report cards. This review of over 100 years of research on grading considers five types of studies: (a) early studies of the reliability of grades, (b) quantitative studies of the composition of K–12 report card grades, (c) survey and interview studies of teachers’ perceptions of grades, (d) studies of standards-based grading, and (e) grading in higher education. Early 20th-century studies generally condemned teachers’ grades as unreliable. More recent studies of the relationships of grades to tested achievement and survey studies of teachers’ grading practices and beliefs suggest that grades assess a multidimension...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the specific factors teachers consider when assigning s...
Summative assessments in classrooms typically result in teacher assigned grades. Grades are well kno...
This research replicates the work of Starch and Elliot (1912) by examining the reliability of the gr...
Grading refers to the symbols assigned to individual pieces of student work or to composite measures...
Historically, across the research on teacher grading and marking practices, in comparison to standar...
As students move from grade level to grade level and onto college, their grades have an impact on th...
Over the last 100 years, researchers have criticized teacher-assigned grades as subjective and unrel...
This descriptive, non-experimental, quantitative study was designed to answer the broad question, “W...
Historically, teacher-assigned grades have been seen as unreliable subjective measures of academic k...
This study sought to determine the concurrent validity between course grades and performance on stan...
Studies suggest that a potential misalignment between assessment and grading practices in reporting ...
Educators have been using the letter grade system of grading and reporting student achievement for s...
The effectiveness of classroom assessment and grading practices has become an increasingly important...
Grades are perhaps the most widely used and universally accepted representation of a student\u27s ac...
For over one hundred years, students’ academic progress has been reported in the form of grades. Thr...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the specific factors teachers consider when assigning s...
Summative assessments in classrooms typically result in teacher assigned grades. Grades are well kno...
This research replicates the work of Starch and Elliot (1912) by examining the reliability of the gr...
Grading refers to the symbols assigned to individual pieces of student work or to composite measures...
Historically, across the research on teacher grading and marking practices, in comparison to standar...
As students move from grade level to grade level and onto college, their grades have an impact on th...
Over the last 100 years, researchers have criticized teacher-assigned grades as subjective and unrel...
This descriptive, non-experimental, quantitative study was designed to answer the broad question, “W...
Historically, teacher-assigned grades have been seen as unreliable subjective measures of academic k...
This study sought to determine the concurrent validity between course grades and performance on stan...
Studies suggest that a potential misalignment between assessment and grading practices in reporting ...
Educators have been using the letter grade system of grading and reporting student achievement for s...
The effectiveness of classroom assessment and grading practices has become an increasingly important...
Grades are perhaps the most widely used and universally accepted representation of a student\u27s ac...
For over one hundred years, students’ academic progress has been reported in the form of grades. Thr...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the specific factors teachers consider when assigning s...
Summative assessments in classrooms typically result in teacher assigned grades. Grades are well kno...
This research replicates the work of Starch and Elliot (1912) by examining the reliability of the gr...