Do Minimum Grading Practices Lower Academic Standards and Produce Social Promotions?
Although schools have always struggled with student failure, retention, and attrition, the turn of the new century has produced added pressures for schools to reduce student dropout rates. In the current political and economic environment, increased costs and reduced budgets are forcing difficult choices in how best to spend limited resources. Cognizant of the secondary and affective aspects of assigned grades on student confidence, self-efficacy, and motivation, increasing numbers of schools have been experimenting with modified grading practices. Many of the strategies addressing the problem have been described in the popular press as “minimum grading practices” or “zeros aren’t permitted” (ZAP) programs. Proponents argue that modified grading helps contribute positively to student motivation–primarily through maintaining a healthy locus of control within the student. Critics counter that those practices offer unfair and unearned assistance to low-performing students and contribute