Book: Grading
Ungrading: Why Rating Students Undermines Learning (And What to Do Instead)
Adriana’s
Recommendation
"Ungrading" is a capacious term—it is really more of an attitude or philosophy than a concrete practice. Learning about the beliefs, values, and practices of instructors who have implemented various forms of alternative grading can help instructors develop their own approaches.
Though the destination tends to be generally the same, there is variation in the routes, the reasons, the contexts, and the specific ways various individuals at different levels of education enact our changes. This book is an effort to assemble some of the practices faculty have devised to question the apparent centrality of grades as an unchanging, unyielding fact of schooling...
All of the authors included in this book are troubled by some of the consequences of and reasons for grades. It could be because grading dehumanizes and flattens nuances in students practices and understanding. It could be the mechanistic approach, derived from the factory model of education, that we wish to challenge. It could be that we are concerned about the fixation on grades, which leads to cheating, corner cutting, gaming the system, and a misplaced focus on accumulating points rather than on learning. It could be that people wish to be more responsive to individuals in the classroom...