How middle school teachers make sense of mandated reforms to their grading and reporting practices through qualitative interviewing
Grading and reporting practices in secondary schools have traditionally been designed so that teachers assign a single letter or percentage grade at the end of a term to communicate student learning. Increasingly, leaders of secondary schools have mandated change away from these traditional grading...
Published: |
|
---|---|
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20237749 |
Similar Items
-
Enduring Reform : The Impact of Mandated Change on Middle Career Teachers
by: Stone-Johnson, Corrie
Published: (2009) -
Confronting change : an exploration of how teachers experience an externally mandated reform
by: Potter, Shelagh Margaret
Published: (2013) -
Signification and Performance Measurement: Making Sense of Mandated Performance Objectives
by: Fenley, V.M
Published: (2021) -
Policy-based instructional reform in early education: how US Head Start teachers perceive instructional mandates
by: Jennifer Wallace Jacoby, et al.
Published: (2017-09-01) -
How Do Curriculum Mandates Influence the Teaching Practices of High School Mathematics Teachers
by: Hennings, Jacqueline
Published: (2017)