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time would give students the impression that they would learn very little or nothing, which jeopardizes the innate intrinsic motivation of every child to learn. Children who have already lost their desire to learn and only study for their grades have no reason to continue learning after they have achieved the best possible grade. In addition, poor grades represent destructive feedback for students, since they do not provide any constructive assistance, but only absolute key figures. It is also criticized that the way of thinking, which can often be traced back to the grading system, that bad grades lead to poor future prospects, leads to perplexity, pressure, stress and depression among parents and children.
806:. He believes that numbers from 1 to 6 (the school grading system used in Germany) do not do justice to the personalities of the children. In his opinion, grades are neither meaningful nor differentiated and therefore not helpful. For example, the questions whether a student has become more motivated, is more interested in a topic, has learned to deal better with failure and whether he has developed new ideas cannot be answered with grades. Instead, Precht suggests a differentiated written assessment of the students' learning and development path. In his opinion, the grading system comes from a psychologically and
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It is criticized that grades are only short-term snapshots of how much a student has learned in a given period of time, which only partially reflect the actual performance and does not take sufficient account of the individual development of students. Likewise, poor grades over a longer period of
824:
criticizes grades for being responsible for ensuring that students cannot specialize in any topic that they are enthusiastic about and have a talent for, since otherwise their grades in other areas would deteriorate. He also believes that "our society will not develop further...if we force all
769:
in 1792. That assertion has been questioned by
Christopher Stray, who finds the evidence for Farish as the inventor of the numerical mark to be unpersuasive. Stray's article also explains the complex relationship between the mode of examination (oral or written) and the varying philosophies of
846:
Most nations have their own grading system, and different institutions in a single nation can vary in their grading systems as well. However, several international standards for grading have arisen recently, such as the
683:
for varying levels of achievements in a course. Grades can be assigned as letters (usually A to F), as a range (for example, 1 to 6), as a percentage, or as a number out of a possible total (often out of 100).
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criticizes the system of grades as unhelpful and, in her opinion, the resulting competitive thinking in schools and says: "School is there to organize success and not to document failure."
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It is criticized that students often do not learn for their future life or out of interest in the material, but only for the grades and the associated status, which promotes
770:
education these modes imply to both the teacher and the student. As a technology, grading both shapes and reflects many fundamental areas of educational theory and practice.
758:.'" By 1837, Yale had converted these adjectives into numbers on a 4-point scale, and some historians say this is the origin of the standard modern American GPA scale.
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in 1897. However, this system did not become widespread until the 1940s, and was still only used by 67% of primary and secondary schools in the United States in 1971.
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writes: "According to tradition the first grades issued at Yale (and possibly the first in the country) were given out in the year 1785, when
President
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Christopher Stray, "From Oral to
Written Examinations: Cambridge, Oxford and Dublin 1700–1914", History of Universities 20:2 (2005), 94–95.
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699:). GPA is calculated by using the number of grade points a student earns in a given period of time. GPAs are often calculated for
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1256:...sich unsere Gesellschaft nicht weiter ... Wenn wir alle Kinder zwingen, sich an dieselben Bewertungsmaßstäbe anzupassen...
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students, and can be used by potential employers or educational institutions to assess and compare applicants. A
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Gute Noten ohne Stress: Ein Lehrer verrät die besten Tipps und Tricks, um das
Gymnasium erfolgreich zu bestehen
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Bob Marlin argues that the concept of grading students' work quantitatively was developed by a tutor named
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about scientific evidence as to whether GPA correlates with income, job satisfaction, or job effectiveness.
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719:), sometimes referred to as just GPA, is a measure of performance for all of a student's courses.
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grade point average. (n.d.). WordNet2.0 Retrieved 3 October 2011, from
Dictionary.com website:
883:, a group working to create alternatives to the traditional grading system in secondary schools
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1270:"Teachers' perceptions and A-level performance: is there any evidence of systematic bias?"
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Schule ist dazu da, das
Gelingen zu organisieren und nicht das Misslingen zu dokumentieren
8:
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168:
Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the
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868:, a school model for ages 4 through 18 with schools internationally with no grading or
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Anna, die Schule und der liebe Gott: Der Verrat des
Bildungssystems an unseren Kindern
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A Yale Book of
Numbers. Historical Statistics of the College and University 1701–1976
31:
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Prinzipien für eine
Bildungsreform: Der Besuch des Kindergartens sollte Pflicht sein
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This article is about the measuring of academic achievement. For grade levels, see
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Snell, Martin; Thorpe, Andy; Hoskins, Sherria; Chevalier, Arnaud (August 2008).
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951:. New Haven: Yale Office of Institutional Research. p. 310. Archived from
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1094:"Stress blockiert Kinder: Warum Noten in der Schule nicht zukunftsfähig sind"
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738:, after examining 58 Seniors, recorded in his diary that there were 'Twenty
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913:"Il liceale con la media del 9,93 "Sono il più bravo d'Italia""
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1203:"Positionen 18: "Akadämlich" – Freies Denken unerwünscht!"
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uninformed era and does not belong in the 21st century.
877:, an alternative to the traditional letter grade system
832:
of the instructor thereby reinforcing systematic bias.
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children to conform to the same evaluation standards".
1341:
800:criticizes the system of school grades in his book
1036:Technopoly The Surrender of Culture to Technology
1694:
979:"Teaching More by Grading Less (or Differently)"
27:Standardized measurement of academic performance
1602:List of standardized tests in the United States
1547:Principles and Standards for School Mathematics
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99:The examples and perspective in this article
977:Schinske, Jeffrey; Tanner, Kimberly (2014).
931:http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/grade
79:Learn how and when to remove these messages
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1320:
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197:Learn how and when to remove this message
137:Learn how and when to remove this message
945:"C. Undergraduate Studies: Yale College"
679:is the process of applying standardized
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1607:Standardized testing and public policy
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773:The A-D/F system was first adopted by
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1532:National Science Education Standards
1438:Developmentally appropriate practice
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911:Salvo Intravaia (7 November 2009).
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1584:High school graduation examination
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1718:Student assessment and evaluation
1238:Rinas, Jutta (5 September 2012).
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796:German philosopher and publicist
60:This article has multiple issues.
1343:Standards-based education reform
1127:"Das Dilemma mit den Schulnoten"
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1065:Jessica Lahey (12 March 2014).
68:or discuss these issues on the
1713:Educational evaluation methods
1537:National Skill Standards Board
1517:Certificate of Initial Mastery
1240:"Wie wichtig sind gute Noten?"
1201:Jebsen, Ken (18 August 2019).
1067:"Letter Grades Deserve an 'F'"
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713:cumulative grade point average
687:In some countries, grades are
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1:
1244:HAZ – Hannoversche Allgemeine
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881:Mastery Transcript Consortium
813:German educational innovator
765:and first implemented by the
983:CBE: Life Sciences Education
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1209:(in German). Archived from
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113:, discuss the issue on the
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1274:Oxford Review of Education
995:10.1187/cbe.cbe-14-03-0054
842:Grading systems by country
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836:Grading systems by country
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1574:Criterion-referenced test
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1286:10.1080/03054980701682140
875:Competency-based learning
1542:No Child Left Behind Act
1512:Adequate Yearly Progress
1186:Precht, Richard (2013).
943:Pierson, George (1983).
1677:Traditional mathematics
1463:Outcome-based education
767:University of Cambridge
1527:National Reading Panel
1473:Small schools movement
1468:Problem-based learning
1453:Inquiry-based learning
1152:Ammel, Rainer (2017).
1034:Postman, Neil (1992).
849:European Baccalaureate
820:German neuroscientist
461:Bosnia and Herzegovina
424:European Baccalaureate
164:is missing information
36:Grade (disambiguation)
34:. For other uses, see
1672:Traditional education
775:Mount Holyoke College
732:George Wilson Pierson
1667:Tracking (education)
1579:Norm-referenced test
1569:Authentic assessment
798:Richard David Precht
119:create a new article
111:improve this article
101:may not represent a
40:GPA (disambiguation)
1662:Standard algorithms
693:grade point average
1632:Direct instruction
1594:Standardized tests
1504:Learning standards
1494:Educational equity
1443:Discovery learning
955:on 21 January 2016
861:Grading on a curve
1703:Academic transfer
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1458:Open-space school
1213:on 11 August 2021
828:Grading may also
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