Standards-Based Report Cards 2014-2015. What are standards-based report cards? Standards-based report cards are a way of reporting: ✤ a student’s level.

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Standards-Based Report Cards

2014-2015

What are standards-based report cards?

Standards-based report cards are a way of reporting:

a student’s level of mastery of grade level standards

Purpose

To provide more specialized reporting: precise and specific information about a child’s progress toward a standard

To support common criteria for grading

To support students in answering:

Where am I going?

Where am I now?

How can I close the gap?

How does Standards-Based Grading Work?

Standards-Based Grading assesses a student’s overall work and most recent work so it tells us what a student has learned and what he or she now knows rather than what they knew at the beginning of a quarter or unit.

In other words, it measures students’ knowledge of grade-level content over time by reporting the most recent, consistent level of performance.

So, a student might struggle in the beginning of a course with new content, but then learn and demonstrate proficient performance by the end of the course.

How does Standards-Based Grading Work?

Subjective factors like attendance, effort, and attitude are not included in the grades. 

In standards based grading, we will report proficiency and work habits (learning skills) separately in order to give a more accurate report of student progress.  

Key Components

Aligned with North Carolina Common Course of Study

Encore scores included at semester

Scores include a 1, 2, 3, or 4

Reading Levels are reported quarterly

Learning Skills

Comments

Grading to an “End of the Year Standard”

“End of the Year Standard”

Student progress will be reported on a quarterly basis toward the “end of the year standard”

Therefore, students may receive a “2” on the report card as they are making progress toward proficiency

The goal is for all students to have at least a “3” in all areas by the end of the school year

Students will receive a “3” on the report card when they have mastered the grade level standard

Scoring Scale

Mark Interpretation

4 Exceeds grade-level standard

3 Meets grade-level standard

2 Progressing toward grade-level standard

1 Limited progress toward grade-level standard

Blank Not Assessed

How do we determine the appropriate mark (1,2, 3, or 4)?

Scoring Scales

Additional Resources

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