Saffron: But we've been wed. Aren't we to become one flesh? Mal: Well, no, uh... We're still two fleshes here, and I think that your flesh ought to sleep somewhere else.

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


Spike's Bitches 27: I'm Embarrassed for Our Kind.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


Laura - Nov 18, 2005 9:35:39 am PST #5581 of 10003
Our wings are not tired.

Brendon gets a 5.0 for A's in honors classes, and sometimes HS credit. Not that his laziness ever gets A's anymore.


vw bug - Nov 18, 2005 9:35:58 am PST #5582 of 10003
Mostly lurking...

I'm sleepy.


SuziQ - Nov 18, 2005 9:39:03 am PST #5583 of 10003
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

K-Bug takes two AP classes and if she earns a C, it is actually counted as a B when figuring GPA (B is an A, and an A is a "5"). I believe the HP classes are graded the same way. The difference between the two is that at the end of the AP class (May actually), they take a test which, if they pass, gives them college credit for the course.


brenda m - Nov 18, 2005 9:42:54 am PST #5584 of 10003
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

While we were mostly a 4.0-based school (Greensboro, NC, 1983-85) the honors and AP students had the chance to pull a 5.0 if they got A's in their tougher classes. I don't know that it was to punish the shop/PE/remedial folks so much as to reward the students who took the tougher academic classes. Which may work out to the same thing. But a 4.0 still counted as an A.

I would have had such a better record if my school had done this, or what K-Bug's school did. And really, that's the argument: that when colleges are looking at GPAs, the traditional 4-point scale doesn't reflect that some classes (and some schools) are a lot tougher than others.


askye - Nov 18, 2005 9:43:35 am PST #5585 of 10003
Thrive to spite them

My high school (at least at the time) did not weight grades so an A was an A no matter where you earned it. We were a small graduating class and when other schools were starting to do away with Valedictorian and however you spell the second S placce, we didn't. The V and S were very good students who took the AP and other hard classes and that was fine. However, there was a girl who ranked 4 or 5 and she took regular classes, I think she was in my Algebra II class. She was a very nice girl who worked really hard for her grades, the girls who ranked just behind her were pissed off. I heard them bitch and moan and say vicious things about her because she was ruining their chances at a decent college education.


Jessica - Nov 18, 2005 9:44:52 am PST #5586 of 10003
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

My HS did weighted GPAs too, but we were warned that colleges would also be seeing the raw grades, so we shouldn't depend on the AP credits to prop us up.


erikaj - Nov 18, 2005 9:47:24 am PST #5587 of 10003
Always Anti-fascist!

I took weighted classes too, and hustled hard for my Bs. Except that I took math with the slow kids and teen moms. Actually, in many ways that was better for my education.


SuziQ - Nov 18, 2005 9:48:29 am PST #5588 of 10003
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

Interesting, Jessica. At college night recently, a few of the college reps told K-Bug that the fact that she was taking two AP classes her sophomore year counted more than the actual grades she earns (well, she has to pass and all that). The higher the grade, the better, but still...


Volans - Nov 18, 2005 9:48:59 am PST #5589 of 10003
move out and draw fire

We didn't have AP classes at my high school, and when I applied to college no one could tell me what scores the colleges would see.

After I got to school, I spent one summer working in the Admissions office, recalculating GPAs from schools that used non-standard scales. So I think my school probably reported the weighted GPA.


Connie Neil - Nov 18, 2005 9:58:53 am PST #5590 of 10003
brillig

I remember nothing of how my schools defined grading. I've been too busy being weirded out that I caught myself holding the copy of Newsweek at arm's length so I could read it better at lunch.