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Public schools

'Equity' Grading Is the Latest Educational Fad Destined To Fail

Why work extra hard when you won't be able to get an A? Why try to improve when you won't get worse than a C?

Steven Greenhut | 5.3.2024 7:30 AM

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A test paper with questions filled out, a pencil sitting on the page, and a big red 'F' with a circle around it | Photo 130245786 | School © Dragan Andrii | Dreamstime.com
(Photo 130245786 | School © Dragan Andrii | Dreamstime.com)

Modern public-education history is littered with novel education theories that have failed so spectacularly that the terms are now used as pejoratives. For instance, when I was in elementary school in the 1960s, the "New Math" focused on teaching abstractions rather than fundamentals. You can find reams of research documenting its failure decades later, but the evidence was recognized almost immediately.

That then-new approach "ignored completely the fact that mathematics is a cumulative development and that it is practically impossible to learn the newer creations if one does not know the older ones," according to Morris Kline's 1973 "Common Core," a set of educational standards embraced by California and 39 other states in 2010. On hindsight, it also deserves a failing grade.

"Despite the theory's intuitive appeal, standards-based reform does not work very well in reality," read a 2021 Brookings Institution report. "The illusion of a coherent, well-coordinated system is gained at the expense of teachers' flexibility in tailoring instruction to serve their students." Don't get me started on some of the loopier ones: pass-fail grading, the replacement of phonics with whole-language learning, and Social Emotional Learning (SEL).

"Education in the United States has lurched from fad to fad for the better part of a century, finding ever-ingenious ways to underperform preceding generations," explained investigative reporter Joe Herring in a 2022 piece reviewing some of them. Apparently, there isn't enough productive employment for education PhDs, so they spend their time dreaming up big experiments to improve education rather than focusing on the obvious ones.

The process gains life as evidence pours in about the latest underperformance. And the latest data certainly is impressive, albeit in a depressing way. Following COVID-19 stay-at-home orders, traditional public schools (and California's in particular) couldn't rise to the occasion. Teachers' unions slowed re-openings. Test scores plummeted, especially for poor and minority students. Many students checked out permanently, as soaring chronic absentee rates prove.

Always eager to embrace easy-button solutions rather than, say, ideas that promote competitiveness and excellence, our school bureaucracies are on to some "innovative" ideas that have a ballpark-zero chance of improving educational outcomes. The new ones are based around the concept of equity. As with every education reform fad, they sound OK in the elevator pitch. Who doesn't support equity? But they will create a mess that further impedes student progress.

For instance, some Bay Area schools have approved "equity grading." It's strange to focus on grading rather than teaching, but the details are even stranger. The Mercury News reports that one district removed "the practice of awarding zero points for assignments as long as they were 'reasonably attempted.'" It also eliminated extra credit for class participation. EG offers students "multiple chances to make up missed or failed assignments and minimize homework's impact on a student's grade." Now it will be almost impossible to get an A or an F.

It brings to mind Garrison Keilor's Lake Wobegon, the fictional Minnesota town "where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking and all the children are above average." Parents rightly worry that the new grading system will promote slacking. Why work extra hard when you won't be able to get an A? Why try to improve when you won't get worse than a C? It will create a false sense of equity—and make it tougher for colleges to recognize the best students.

Education theorists and consultants who promote this nonsense claim that it will encourage students and teachers to focus entirely on the mastery of material rather than surrounding fluff. They say it will better prepare students for the work world. Yet a lot of that so-called fluff—class participation, completing homework, handing in assignments on time—contribute mightily to such mastery.

Regarding the work world, ask my editor what he thinks if I miss my deadlines and still expect a paycheck. "Supporters of mastery-based grading say it could promote equity," notes an Education Next article. But will it improve learning and test scores? One needn't be a math whiz to know the answer.

State education officials also have jumped on the equity bandwagon. The California State Board of Education last year approved a new 1,000-page math framework that, as Education Week reported, "aims to put meaning-making at the center of the math classroom" and "encourages teachers to make math culturally relevant and accessible for all students." The framework isn't binding on districts, but it will influence everything from textbooks to teaching standards.

I'm not sure how to make mathematical computations more meaningful and relevant, but I suppose someone will write a book about its failures in a few years. Meanwhile, many parents know what succeeds: competition. But providing additional schooling options would pressure school bureaucracies and jobs-protecting teachers' unions to improve, and to them that's not a tolerable outcome.

This column was first published in The Orange County Register.

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Steven Greenhut is western region director for the R Street Institute and was previously the Union-Tribune's California columnist.

Public schoolsEducationTeachers UnionsCaliforniaEquity
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  1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    James Lindsay has spoken many hours about this.
    The new way to teach math has the goal of dividing students and parents. The goal of sel is to create emotionally damaged children

    1. Graf Fuddington von Fuddrick   1 year ago

      Get rid of the democrats. They’re the source of all this bullshit.

      How much more are we going to take?

      1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        And replace them with what? Theocratic Fascists who dont want evolution taught in schools?

        1. docduracoat   1 year ago

          At least the children will be able to do math

        2. Truthfulness   1 year ago

          Why do you think Catholic schools are doing better than public schools?

  2. Spiritus Mundi   1 year ago

    The biggest obstacle to equity is the fact people aren't equal.

  3. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

    What exactly is equitable about failing to teach students?

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Equality of outcomes doesn't require equality of effort.

    2. Minadin   1 year ago

      It's a lot easier to fail to teach everyone equally than it is to provide a high level of equal opportunity for every student.

      1. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

        Bingo

      2. n00bdragon   1 year ago

        Very succinct and well-written answer.

  4. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

    Good article. The "education" racket has been using kids as guinea pigs for their evil experiments for generations. The sad fact is that kids that actually succeed do so in spite of, not because of the latest fad curriculum. The best thing parents can do is try to protect their kids from the stultifying bullshit and let them learn as much as possible on their own. Young minds are hungry for knowledge. Don't let that curiosity be destroyed.

  5. SRG2   1 year ago

    Re: new math(s)

    It was taught to us at my boarding school. IMO the problem was this. Basically, people are either good at maths or they're not. If you're good at maths (I was), new maths was easy, fun, and interesting. If you're not, it might as well have been written in Glagolitic - so teach the old stuff.

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Not meant as reply. Down below.

    2. American Mongrel   1 year ago

      And soccer is a good abbreviation of association... right

      1. SRG2   1 year ago

        It's due to a combination of abbreviation, "assoc. football" as opposed to "rugby football", and the Etonian diminutive, where a schwa is appended to all or part of a name.

        I find that some Americans are surprised to discover that "soccer" was an English coinage.

        1. Truthfulness   1 year ago

          It's still a strange derivation. The English are even more shocked than the Americans on this.

    3. Zeb   1 year ago

      What's usually called "new math" is pretty much from the 60s and was a shift away from rote learning of basic arithmetic towards promoting understanding of more abstract and fundamental mathematical concepts. Which is good and interesting for people actually talented and interested in math. But maybe some people are better off just learning to do their sums and moving on.
      The "New new math" that we're getting now I'm not so sure about. But I don't really know enough to have a strong opinion.

      1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        Ladder Division.

        Look it up and remember the grade level they are introducing it to don't have good ear handwriting.

        It's horrible.

  6. JesseAz   1 year ago

    Basically the same as new journalism being citing twitter and each other instead of primary sources.

    1. SRG2   1 year ago

      Yup. AFAICT Raw Story is a prime example - every article I've ever read after someone had linked to it turned out to be a reporting of what some other source had written.

    2. charliehall   1 year ago

      From a singer songwriter who was also a mathematician.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W6OaYPVueW4

      1. Truthfulness   1 year ago

        The methods failed and the current education establishment want to make things even worse.

  7. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    Home schooling is the only answer.

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      An interesting variety of choices including home schooling, private schools without any government 'guidelines', religious schools; anything except public employee staffed 'schools'.
      Not everyone can homeschool.
      Many answers, but the government is not one of them.

  8. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

    ""handing in assignments on time""

    Timeliness is a trait of white supremacy according to anti-racist training.

    I'm sure you can find a slide on the Internet of white supremacy traits if you think I'm BSing.

    1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

      https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.redd.it%2Fctj2317739b51.png

      The Smithsonian's Guide to Whiteness

  9. Yuno Hoo   1 year ago

    I'm not sure how to make mathematical computations more meaningful and relevant

    Perhaps something like this?

    1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

      Dungeons and Dragons. Math disguised as Skyrim.

  10. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

    Turns out there may be an answer to this whole anti-Israel campus kerfuffle thing. Remove the self immolation stigma!
    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1778805049033969983.html
    The remarks centered on the suicide of Aaron Bushnell, the U.S. serviceman who set himself on fire in February to protest U.S. support for Israel—or, as Izar put it, "indigenous Palestine."
    Bushnell was widely seen as a casualty of mental illness. The presentation argued he could also be considered a "martyr," a man in full control of his mental faculties who had responded rationally to a "genocide" unfolding thousands of miles away.
    "Yes, he carried a lot of distress," Izar said. "But does that mean the actions he engaged in are any less valid?"
    Isn’t it normal, she continued, "to be distressed when you’re seeing this level of carnage" in Gaza?
    By "perpetuating the stigma of self-immolation," Izar and Moustafa said, psychiatrists "discredit" resistance to "power structures" like "colonization," "homophobia," and "white supremacy," framing legitimate acts of protest as signs of psychiatric dysfunction.

  11. TJJ2000   1 year ago

    It's not a Commie-Indoctrination Camp for nothing. Sadly these students will attempt to apply their learned BS as adults and shame FDR with the amount of USA conquering they'll end up doing.

  12. Rick James   1 year ago

    Does anyone else feel like we're reading a version of Reason that should have existed in 2015?

  13. One-Punch_Man   1 year ago

    "encourages teachers to make math culturally relevant" WTF?

    Oh remember the teachers in CA that said math isn't about getting the right answer but trying? I'm sure they would complain to the bank if their money was short.

    Heaven forbid we have a standard test across the country so companies can compare applicants to find the best one

    1. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

      In the end you have culture not systemic racism as the problem..cure the culture, no single moms, hard working parents and even dumb kids can get through high school and algebra.

  14. One-Punch_Man   1 year ago

    Math - racist
    Science - racist
    Reading - racist

    Is there any subject that isn't? Isn;'t Equity grading just saying that they believe that some people can't do the work? How is that not racist

  15. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

    Can one not still earn an A by doing the work correctly, even if there is no extra credit?

    1. a2plusb2   1 year ago

      Back in the early 1980s when I was taking a college class in the evenings someone told me about European standards of grading (then) = You do all the assigned work you get a 'C'; you do all of the problems at the end of the chapter you get a 'B'. It takes something above and beyond to get an 'A'.

  16. AT   1 year ago

    It will create a false sense of equity—and make it tougher for colleges to recognize the best students.

    Don't say things like "best students." It makes the Marxist's heads explode. They loathe distinctions between Good and Bad, Better or Worse, and especially Good and Evil.

    Remember the goal of "equity" is equally shared misery.

    https://imgur.com/a/3nYY9fZ

    Also, ALL sense of "equity" is a false sense.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93tR96egox4

  17. Max Rocketanski   1 year ago

    What happened to 'No Child Left Behind'?

    As I recall, under performing schools were to be closed after 5 years of under performing.

    I haven't heard of any schools being closed.

  18. Ronsch   1 year ago

    I taught college-level for five years, and I preferred students who didn't care about grades but rather cared about learning. I never cared about grades myself, all the way to Ph.D. I only cared about learning. Teach kids to care about learning.

    1. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

      What was your PhD in? Physics, Engineering or Gender studies or "Education"?

  19. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

    This is all about black and now central american kids not doing well in school. First it was about funding...so in the 80's urban schools received billions and billions..that didn't work. Next it was the tests were racist (anyone recall Jesse Jackson saying black kids couldn't learn math because the textbooks used things like "boats or yachts" in algebra problems. Now if ou can't get your tribes scores up..just push performing kids down (end of enriched programs) and finally the best of all...grades don't matter, objective measurements don't matter. Math is racist, science is racist. And all traditional methods of education which have been shown to work for 3K years are wrong.

    And the blame goes to schools of "education" which are a waste of resources and PTA moms on schools boards who don't tell the admin to piss off because they are either virtue signaling or too stupid and like the idea of dumbing down everything..

  20. Heresolong   1 year ago

    It may be destined to fail but meanwhile they are throwing out our (I'm a high school math teacher) very effective math curriculum and replacing it with non-rigorous garbage because the old curriculum isn't working for "under served populations". They are teaching the kids 25% less math and doing a worse job of it. Even the kids hate it but unfortunately only the kids who want to learn. I'm assuming the "under served population" is relatively silent.

    1. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

      Black "leaders" are often the ones the liberal White school boards or Admins or Schools of Education listen to. Often the "leaders" are credentialed in some joke social science degree and themselves are poor at math or critical thinking (just like most White "credentialed" experts in social science and education). They don't want to focus on the cultural aspect impacting generational ability to learn and rather just blame "society" and dumb everything down. Just like the idea of stopping racism was if a Black person made the grade in a test or passed training, they could not be denied the opportunity..as that didn't give the results the left wanted the test became the problem and the need for hard %'s forced on private and public sectors. The problem isn't race..it is culture. Fix the culture and even a kid below the mean can pass algebra and have enough critical thinking to make a good living for themselves. The equity folks in education are racists when you think about it.

  21. a2plusb2   1 year ago

    What do the severe deficits in performance at some schools tell us? One leading answer is that the people and students there believe that the training that is most needed is that of taking from other people.

    1. TJJ2000   1 year ago

      ^BINGO... Exactly this.

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