West Virginia Board Revises High School Requirement, Grading

The West Virginia Board of Education has agreed to reduce the credits required to graduate from the state’s high schools from 24 to 22, allowing two fewer elective classes.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that change will apply in the next school year.

The board on Wednesday also agreed to change high schools’ statewide grading scale starting July 1.

The current scale says 0-64 is F, 65-74 is D, 75-84 is C, 85-92 is B and 93-100 is A.

Under the revision, 90-100 will generate an A. Other ranges will also shift a few points lower.

Similar changes will affect 1.0 through 4.0 grade-point-average scales.

W.Va. Public Schools Are Now Being Graded

The West Virginia College and Career Ready Standards are being implemented for the first time in West Virginia schools this fall and so is a new system to grade the schools themselves.

Lawmakers were updated about the implementation of both the new standards and the accountability system during an interim meeting at the Capitol Monday. The system measures the performance of individual schools and gives them an A through F grade based on a variety of factors.

83 percent of a school’s performance is based on growth and student proficiency. The remaining 17 percent is based on non-performance items like attendance, graduation rates, and passage of dual-credit and AP courses.

West Virginia Board of Education member Lloyd Jackson says the grades the schools receive are directly tied to the standards taught in the classroom.

“We can’t constantly be changing our standards,” Jackson said, “Our assessments need to be aligned and they need to be consistent. Our accountability system has to operate over a number of years to be the kind of indicator of growth we want to see, and yes, we have to build capacity in those schools, but in order to know where to do that is to pin it on the results of our system as I’ve outlined to you.”

Jackson says the 2015-2016 grades for schools will be released in the next few months.

West Virginia Schools to be Assigned A through F Grades

The West Virginia Board of Education has voted to adopt an amendment to its accountability policy that will give schools A through F grades.

The board said in a news release that it approved the revised policy at its monthly meeting Wednesday.

The grades will be based largely on students’ scores on the statewide Smarter Balanced standardized tests.

Christy Hovanetz, a representative from the Foundation for Excellence in Education Senior Policy, told the board that most statewide teacher unions do not support the grading system for schools.

Board President Mike Green argued that the new grading system is not punitive, but is meant to give attention to low-performing schools in an effort to improve them.

The amended policy will take effect on July 11.

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