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Assessment Letter to the Editor

The Truth About Equity Grading in Practice

January 30, 2026 1 min read
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To the Editor:

As the equity-grading debate between teachers and school districts heats up, as mentioned in the Aug. 20, 2025, article, 鈥Here鈥檚 What Teachers Really Think About Equitable Grading Policies,鈥 student voices are missing from the conversation despite belonging to the people most impacted. I would like to offer a firsthand perspective on the issue.

Two years ago, my school district rolled out new equity-grading policies that mirror the ones described in the article. Unfortunately, while intended to help at-risk students graduate and succeed, the policy produced adverse effects for both teachers and peers at my school. One issue frustrating the entire process for my school was uneven rollout. Some challenging classes, like Advanced Placement World History, switched to a new grading system, while others, such as Honors Chemistry, did not. Some teachers even found ways to circumvent the unlimited retakes policy by making it so hard that students effectively only had one chance.

Class participation also decreased. I witnessed many of my peers procrastinate. They鈥檇 come to class unprepared, likely thinking, 鈥淚f I could complete this assignment later for full credit, why bother doing it now?鈥 As a result, teachers wasted precious instruction time reviewing content or giving students time to complete past-due homework. When my peers finally submitted their work at the end of the unit, teachers were overburdened and forced to grade many assignments at the last minute.

Poor academic achievement isn鈥檛 about grading. It鈥檚 about access to resources. Schools should instead invest in tutoring programs, enrichment classes, and other initiatives to alleviate the problem, not lower the bar for 鈥渟uccess.鈥

Aayush Gandhi
Student
Dublin, Calif.

read the article mentioned in the letter

A classroom is seen at Woodmore Elementary @ Meadowbrook on August 15, 2025 in Bowie, Maryland. In a so-called 鈥榮wing move,鈥 Woodmore Elementary has relocated to Meadowbrook Elementary school until Summer 2027.
A classroom is seen at Woodmore Elementary @ Meadowbrook on August 15, 2025 in Bowie, Md. A new survey shows most teachers have begun to use some elements of what's known as equitable grading.
Pete Kiehart for Education Week

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A version of this article appeared in the February 01, 2026 edition of Education Week as The truth about equity grading in practice

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