Dissertation Defense Announcement for Laura Jane Link

The College of Education, Health and

Human Sciences

Announces the Final Examination of

Laura Jane Link

for the degree of

Doctor of Education

March 18, 2014 at 1:00pm

123 Ball Hall, University of Memphis

Memphis, TN

 

Biographical Sketch

Bachelor of Science, Secondary English Education, Florida State University

Master of Science, English Education, North Georgia College & State University

Advisor Committee

Larry McNeal, Ph.D., Professor, Leadership, Committee chair

Reginald Leon Green, Ed.D., Professor, Leadership

Louis Franceschini, Ph.D., Research Associate, Center Research Education Policy (CREP)

Charisse Gulosino, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Leadership

Major Field of Study

Leadership & Policy Studies

Period of Preparation:  2011-2014

Comprehensive Examination Passed: December, 2013

Teachers’ Perceptions of Grading Practices

Abstract

Decades of research suggest that grading practices vary widely among American K-12 classroom teachers, and the many factors that teachers choose to determine grades have little, if anything, to do with what students know and are able to do. More current research, however, has made connections between effective grading practices and their ability to compel positive student motivation and greater student academic success. This study reinforces and extends that work by conducting a secondary analysis of 2,996 urban and suburban West Tennessee K-12 teachers’ views about grading practices, centered on six factors:  relationship to grade levels taught, district policy, teacher effectiveness summative and observation scores, years of experience and type of training. A slightly-modified version of the Teachers’ Perceptions of Grading Practices (TPGP) questionnaire was used to survey the participating teachers in May of 2013.

This study quantitatively examines teachers’ grading agreements and disagreements resulting from survey item analysis and comparisons between teacher groups. The results of item means, standard deviations, t and g statistics revealed that teachers, across the 6 factor groups, mainly agreed grading can encourage good work, provide essential feedback for students, and that grades of zero can demotivate students to learn.  Yet, in contradiction, middle/high school teachers, especially those from non-traditional training, largely favored the practice of assigning zeros for students’ failure to complete assignments as opposed to their elementary peers. To compound, the same middle/high school teachers in the urban district also favored basing grades on students’ completion of homework, effort and class participation—grading practices rooted in student behavior rather than academic mastery. Policy in the urban district was found to undermine use of effective grading practices and may be a significant influence on the urban teachers’ perceptions resulting in this study.

Understanding teachers’ perceptions of grading practices can be used as a framework for identifying educational resources meant to help schools, teachers and students perform, especially in our results-driven reality where assessment and accountability have become the driving forces for educational practices. If policy makers are aware of teachers’ perceptions regarding grading, especially where they agree and disagree, they can help teachers formulate grading practices that promote student motivation, critical thinking and problem-solving skills. Training on assessment and grading practices can be further infused into middle/high school teachers’ preparation programs and ongoing professional development. Policy makers may consider a curricular and programmatic overhaul of non-traditional teacher programs to include more courses/training on assessments and grading prior to granting individual licensure or program accreditation. A mentoring program to match teachers demonstrating effective grading practices with those that are not can be developed to help teachers improve their teaching and promote use of effective instructional and grading practices.