Struggling with ways to raise cash for technology, [Rosewood Middle School in North Carolina] came upon the idea of selling extra points. A $20 donation earned a student 20 test points – 10 extra points on two tests of the student’s choosing. A $30 donation bought the test points and admission to a 5th-period dance; a $60 donation purchased students test points, the dance invitation, and a “special 30-minute lunch period with pizza, drink and the choice to invite one friend to join them.”
This scheme was cancelled, but only after a local newspaper made it public.
Wow. I had students from Central America offer me $5 to raise their grade, apparently a common practice where they came from. I really hate that we're doing it here.
ReplyDeleteShame on that school.
ReplyDeleteCCL
What's the problem?
ReplyDeleteThis is an elegant, innovative, market-based solutions that simultaneously solves the problem of schools freeloading on taxpayer dollars and declining test scores. These entrepreneducators should be congratulated, not pilloried.
You'd have to be a fool and a communist to think otherwise.
The Raleigh News & Observer should be charged with restraint of trade and closed down.
The idea that grades, success and prosperity should be based on merit is a liberal absurdity which has held this country back for far too long.
Thirty-five to forty years ago when I was teaching at Indiana University, I had students on several occasions ask me to raise their grades because they were pre-Med or just because. Even one student who did no assignment and was zero-flunking asked me not to flunk her. None of them, however, offered anything but tales of woe. No grades were ever changed.
ReplyDeleteLorin --
ReplyDeleteNice troll post
CCL
I think Lorin was using tongue-in-cheek humor rather than trolling.
ReplyDeleteMy high school had an annual fund raiser for charity as part of our school's Spirit Week, and my calc teacher ingeniously (as I thought) would win the homeroom challenge by allowing each of his students to add one full grade level (from a B to an A, for instance) on one test, two quizzes, and 5 homework assignments per student.
ReplyDeleteIf I recall correctly, he asked for $25/test, $15/quiz, and $5/homework assignment.
I admit it was cheap to do, but I certainly appreciated the better grades and charities got a nice boost from the scam.