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Grade definitions Grading system Cheating Missing or late work
Grades are not based on effort. Instead, they are based on actual performance. (When you choose a doctor or an auto mechanic, you don't care if they tried hard when they were in school. You care whether they know what they are doing.)
General description of the grading system The overall course grade is based on the combination of four grades. These four grades will be based on evaluation of four different sorts of written work students will be expected to complete in this course:
The difference between an examination and an essay is that in an essay students launch out more on their own, to produce an original analysis or argument, while the examinations are more a matter of summarizing, synthesizing, and analyzing the readings and class discussions. Study questions will be graded as satisfactory or not, except for cases in which extra credit is given to an outstanding job, or partial credit is given for a particularly weak response. Students can help or hurt their grades in this course quite significantly by doing well or poorly on these small items, even though no one such item counts for much. The overall final course grade will be determined as follows:
Total points possible then = 105. It is not possible to predict exactly how many items there will be in category 3. So, each one will be awarded temporary points individually based on quality of performance. For example, each study question set that is turned in will normally be worth one temporary point. Quizzes may be worth one or two points. The resulting number of temporary points possible on all these items by the end of the term will probably not equal 20. The temporary points will be converted into real points by prorating at the end of the term. For example, if there are 25 temporary points possible on all study questions, quizzes, and so forth, then each temporary point turns out to be worth 20/25th's of a real point, so that 25 temporary points will be converted into 20 real points. Final grades will be based on the total points earned, using a scale no higher than this one:
This may look like a very lenient scale, if you think about it in terms of percentages, since there are 105 points possible. It actually is not lenient, because it will be easy to lose points on the essays and exams. For example a 9 out of 15 would be thought of as a high C on an essay. Just don't think in terms of percentages when you think about this grading system. A better sense of what it takes for a high grade can be obtained by reading the grade definitions above.
Plagiarism or other forms of academic dishonesty can nullify the entire grading system described above, for students involved. Such cases will be dealt with in accord with university policy, and can easily result in a student's failing the entire course, or even being dismissed from the university.
Policies about missing or late course work
If you have a documentable disability that requires a special accommodation in this course, contact the Disability Concerns office right away to make arrangements through them. |