Buy that special someone an AP Physics prep book! The 2025 edition will come out on Oct. 15, 2024, and is 100% aligned with the new course and exam description, including new practice exams: 5 Steps to a 5 AP Physics 1

Visit Burrito Girl's handmade ceramics shop, The Muddy Rabbit: Mugs, vases, bowls, tea bowls...

22 December 2021

Contract grading in AP Physics 1 part 1: Why I do it.

The most important qualification for success in AP Physics 1 is the want-to barrier.  I mean, yes, there's a level of intellectual horsepower required.  Yet, the borderline students who willingly opt in to the challenge of a college level course tend to do well in the long term, while borderline students who are pushed by parents or counselors - or by the transactional potential of a higher GPA - to take AP physics tend to perform poorly.

Much more importantly, the borderline students who opt in for the right reasons don't bring their classmates or the class culture down.  And such students don't bring *me* down.  Rather, they make me happy.

A number of years ago, I decided I need to limit my work with advanced students to those who truly want to work with me.  I'm sick of fighting with smart students who use my class to game the college admission system.  I'm done with students who have no interest in physics, just in getting a weighted A on their GPA.   I have no patience left for those whose goal is to simultaneously maximize their honors grade while minimizing the engagement necessary to earn that grade.  

My first step was to focus my work on the youngest students.  Our boarding school 9th graders have already made the personal decision to seek out a challenging environment.  They could all have remained at their local public or independent high school.  Already these 14 year olds have shown themselves to be not entirely risk-averse.  They see their teachers as kindly parental figures whose goal is to know, challenge, and care for them.  They *don't* yet see teachers primarily as mean, demanding authoritarians who are obstacles to their success.

Yet, precisely because these barely-teenagers have just taken an enormous leap outside what was comfortable for them, they often don't want to compound leap upon leap.  Our freshmen congregate to the popular activities that their peers say are cool - mostly football and soccer in the fall, rarely theater or the outdoors program.  When we tried giving the freshmen the option to choose to join an AP physics section a few weeks after arrival, many qualified candidates stayed away.  They (and their parents) wanted a "solid start" to their boarding school career.  They were still gaining their footing in discovering who they were socially and athletically - they didn't want to risk "failing" academically.

So, we've gone to a contract grading system in the 9th grade AP Physics 1 class, in which all students in the course get an A- on each term report, no matter what.  After a year of just seven students opting in to AP Physics 1, I've had class sizes of 15, 20, and 20 - out of only 90 or so total 9th grade students at the school.  The students are happy, they're enthusiastic, they're fun to be around.  They're learning physics well enough to pass the AP exam (13/15 passing in 2020, 18/20 passing in 2021, probably similar in 2022.)

I'm sure you have two major questions:

(1) How did I and my school make this happen?  In a school that emphatically publishes grades six times per year, how do I get away with my class being such an outlier?

(2) Without term grades as a motivator, what techniques do I use to keep students invested and engaged for the long haul of a school year?

I'll address each of these questions in the next posts.  




1 comment:

  1. I love this idea. Looking forward to the follow-up posts...

    ReplyDelete