I鈥檝e been having a series of conversations with Joe Feldman, the author of Grading for Equity, about efforts to promote equitable grading. In a recent conversation, Joe and I discussed a recent by Meredith Coffey and Adam Tyner of the Fordham Institute, in which they offered a scathing take on the evidence used to justify equitable grading. Joe was fairly critical of their conclusions, which prompted Coffey and Tyner to pen a letter. I think it鈥檚 a serious, hard-hitting contribution to this timely debate and thought it worth sharing with you. Coffey is a senior research associate at Fordham with a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin, while Tyner is Fordham鈥檚 national research director with a Ph.D. from the University of California, San Diego. Here鈥檚 what they had to say.
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Dear Rick,
We鈥檙e glad that you and Joe Feldman took the time to discuss of 鈥渆quity grading鈥 reforms. Like Feldman, we value educational equity, so we鈥檙e also glad he noticed that we agree with him on some equity-oriented grading reforms, like eliminating most extra credit and using rubrics to score assignments. Far from being 鈥渋ronic,鈥 as he called it, our agreement on those points is entirely consistent with our recommendation to 鈥渢ake the best parts from both traditional and equity-oriented grading approaches.鈥
Still, our policy brief urges readers to about other grading reforms that could undermine students鈥 motivation and learning. Though our brief isn鈥檛 specifically about Feldman鈥檚 work, we鈥檝e closely followed your series with him, and over the course of your conversations, we鈥檝e been left scratching our heads at a number of claims that Feldman made to you.
For example, Feldman told you that 鈥渁bolishing penalties for late work鈥 is not part of his program. Yet on Page 111 of his book, he lists 鈥減enalizing for lateness (tardiness or submitting work past the deadline)鈥 as a biased practice. Then, on Page 115, he writes, 鈥淩educing grades for late work both creates inaccuracy and violates our bias-resistant Driving Principle.鈥 He specifies no alternative penalties, other than on Pages 213鈥14, where he mentions that 鈥渟tudents may need formal reflections鈥 on lateness鈥攚hich he may believe is sufficient to address these problems.
Feldman also told you that prohibiting penalties for cheating and plagiarism is not part of his program. But 鈥減unishing cheating in the grade鈥 is listed as another inequitable practice in his book, again on Page 111. In fairness, he does suggest some mild nongrade penalties, but they are poorly defined, such as 鈥渨ithdrawing some privilege or responsibility,鈥 and he does not address how to implement them equitably. The bottom line is that his system prohibits grade penalties for cheating without putting any real deterrent in their place.
Additionally, Feldman said in your first exchange that the idea of 鈥渆ndless retakes鈥 was 鈥渉yperbolic shorthand.鈥 Yet on Page 175 of his book, he says: 鈥淚f a student鈥檚 mastery of the content is important for success on future content, then you might want to give retakes until students have demonstrated necessary understanding.鈥 Astonishingly, he proclaims that 鈥淢ost schools and districts allow grade changes after a semester is over, so doesn鈥檛 that explicitly allow, perhaps invite, a student who wants to learn unmastered material to continue learning beyond the term and have her grade reflect that learning?鈥 Suggesting that students continue revising their work after the semester ends sure sounds like 鈥渆ndless retakes鈥 to us.
Feldman also mischaracterized our statement that 鈥渁ffluent students often have built-in mechanisms that hold them accountable, such as involved parents,鈥 saying that we are talking about differences in parental expectations. But we did not mention expectations: We mentioned involvement. Moreover, he alleges that we make our claim 鈥渂ased on no evidence.鈥 In fact, in our brief, the words 鈥渋nvolved parents鈥 link to , which shows that more affluent parents are indeed more involved in school activities (see the study鈥檚 Table 4).
In general, we worry that Feldman just isn鈥檛 giving you the straight talk that you and your readers expect.
But perhaps the most troubling of Feldman鈥檚 claims is his repeated assertion that his program does not contribute to grade inflation. In fact, throughout Chapter 7 of his book, Feldman supports 鈥渕inimum grading,鈥 more commonly known as the 鈥溾 policy. With this practice, teachers are prevented from assigning students any grade under 50 percent, often . If a student who would otherwise have earned a zero, a 25, or a 45 suddenly gets a 50, that will necessarily increase (read: inflate) that student鈥檚 grade without changes in the quality of the student鈥檚 work. Feldman is free to argue that these policies are worth considering, but he cannot argue that they do not contribute to inflating grades, particularly for lower-performing students. Most people would recognize that removing penalties for late work and cheating is also likely to inflate grades.
The research base on which Feldman鈥檚 work rests is thin. As far as we can tell, his assertion that his program 鈥渄ecreases both grade inflation and grade deflation鈥 relies on a single that his company conducted internally for use in its marketing materials. Feldman said that the document shows that 鈥渢eachers who use equitable grading practices assign grades that are closer to students鈥 scores on standardized tests.鈥 But it is impossible to evaluate this claim based on the document he cites, which includes very little data, fails to define key terms (e.g., 鈥渁ssessment consistency鈥), and offers no information about the statistical models that produced the results. (Incredibly, considering the nature of this document, Feldman criticized us for not including it in our review of the research on grading practices.) Based on our reading of the document as researchers, it is entirely possible that grades and test scores are less aligned after their program. What we do know is that even Feldman鈥檚 company鈥檚 own analysis offers exactly zero evidence that students learned more after the implementation of his program.
Perhaps his most harmful recommendations are those that remove mechanisms to discourage student procrastination. Feldman argues against not only late penalties but also grades for homework and, in fact, grades for any practice assignments. Virtually every teacher knows that students learn more when they have some shorter-term, smaller-bite, lower-stakes assignments. But those assignments should not have zero stakes, or students will quickly realize that they are effectively optional. Enforcing deadlines and limiting retakes are critical pedagogical tools. All of this, in addition to no-zero policies and failing to dock points for late work, lower expectations and academic standards, despite Feldman鈥檚 confident assertions to the contrary. In the words of , equity grading 鈥渆ncouraged [students] to do the minimum.鈥
If Mr. Feldman cares as much about preserving high expectations and combating grade inflation as he claims, he ought to stop advocating policies that 鈥渆ncourage the minimum鈥 and make it harder for schools to maintain high standards.