I have been moving towards grade-less classes over the past several years. At the moment, there is a Ministry of Education requirement that all 10-12 courses have a number mark/letter grade assigned, but there is no requirement that students receive grades on assignments and quizzes (see below for a description of quality assessment from the Ministry of Education).
Students in my classes will have an opportunity to take part in conversations about What does an A Look Like? and will be given a written list of requirements to achieve a final grade that reflects growth in mathematical thinking and the course content, that is emerging, developing, proficient or mastered.
Throughout the semester, students will receive feedback (written & verbal) on their progress on the learning standards of the course (content & curriculuar competencies) in place of marks. There have been studies (Butler, 1987, 1988) that have shown that students who receive a mark and a written comment, will only look at the mark (Boaler, "Aligning Assessment with Brain Science"). My hope is that students will become more interested in my comments about how they are doing.
I will be assessing students using the following:
My goal this school year is to improve the documentation of student learning, and to involve students in documenting their thinking.
Learning is enhanced when students see their strengths, understand what they need to work on, and are able to set personal goals.
from Hacking Assessment: 10 Ways to Go Gradeless in a Traditional Grades School by Starr Sackstein
“Good grades are a reward for compliance but don’t have much to do with learning. Meanwhile, students whose grades don’t measure up often see themselves as failures and give up trying to learn.”
from Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us by Daniel Pink
From Alfie Kohn’s “The Case Against Grades:”
I liked the marking style. I got to focus on my learning instead of stressing on my marks.
I liked:
I think that the board work was a very good way to teach the concepts, and how the class was based around learning the concepts instead of marks.
The lack of letter grades and numbers helped relieve some stress.
Especially with math, a class should be about learning and not a grade. A teacher should not give a test for a grade and then never give the students an opportunity to actually learn from their mistakes.
I really enjoyed this class because I feel I learned more than if we had a test every two weeks.