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Grading Policy
Undergraduate Grading System
A: Exceptional. The student's attainments are out
of the normal course, unusual and special.
B: Good. The student's performance is done rightfully
or skillfully and is commendable.
C: Satisfactory. The student's accomplishments are
sufficient for the needs of the course.
D: Minimal passing.
F: Failure.
The department's judgments are directed by the following
taxonomy, based on Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational
Objectives.
Knowledge is defined as the remembering of appropriate
previously learned information and articulating it.
This information includes terminology, specific facts,
structures, notations and definitions.
Comprehension is the grasping and understanding of
informational materials including the ability to: follow
the lecture, read the text with understanding, give
examples, and give summary restatements of the course
material.
Application is the use of previously learned information
in concrete situations to solve problems that have
single or best answers. Activities demonstrating application
apply known material in a very specific instance and
include computing, constructing, extending, implementing,participating,
showing, solving, and utilizing.
Analysis is the resolution of informational materials
into their component parts, reflecting on such information
to develop solutions, making inferences and finding
evidenceto support generalizations. Analysis includes
facility with word problems and an ability to differentiate,
distinguish, infer, limit, prioritize, separate and
prove.
Synthesis is the creative application of prior knowledge
and skills to produce a new or original whole. Activities
demonstrating synthesis include proof writing, significant
programming projects, and research papers and projects.
Synthesis includes the ability to clearly and accurately
communicate not only the result of one's creative endeavors
but also the steps taken to achieve it.
Using this taxonomy, we interpret the undergraduate
grading system as follows:
D: Minimum passing indicates the student demonstrates
the appropriate knowledge.
C: Satisfactory indicates that in addition to knowledge,
the student in general demonstrates comprehension and
with some frequency demonstrates application.
B: Good indicates that the student regularly demonstrates
both comprehension and application and demonstrates
analysis and synthesis with some regularity.
A: Exceptional indicates that the student regularly
demonstrates achievement in all categories of the taxonomy. |