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Okay, I'm puzzled. I just got my grades back on one of the discussion posting assignments for my TESC course. My "average grade" for the assignment was 99.47 and the "calculated grade" for that assignment was 100.
Whatzat mean? ![]() I might think the "average grade" was the average of the grades given for each of the posts I made, but in that case, why is the "calculated grade" higher than the average? To date, all of my assignments have gotten me a score of 100, so it's not even the average of all the assignments put together. I'se so confoozed. Again. ![]()
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DONE! History degree from TESC! CLEPS: College Math-69, Sociology-70, Humanities-72, Am. Lit-61, English Lit-69, S. Sciences & History-65, Eng. Comp/w essay-75, Microec.-64, Macroec.-73, Western Civ. I-71, Western Civ. II-71, American Gov't-71, US History I-75, US History II-65, A&I Lit-77, Prin. of Mgmt-76, Prin. of Mktng-76. Biology-69 DSST's: Civil War & Reconst.-70, Modern Middle East-63, World Religions-76, Tech. Writing-67, Prin. of Supervision-67, HR Mgmt-69, Rise & Fall USSR-64, Vietnam War-60, Ethics-69. Intro to Bus-67, Org. Behavior-69, W. Europe-60 |
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The average score is the class average on that particular assignment and the calculated grade is your grade.
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TECEP's passed: English Composition 102 Technical Writing Psychology of Women Word Processing Fundamentals Introduction to Computer Information Systems CLEP's passed: Analyzing and Interpreting Literature - 60 Principles of Management - 71 Principles of Marketing - 67 Principles of Macroeconomics - 54 Principles of Microeconomics - 57 Introduction to Business Law- 65 DSST's passed: Principles of Supervision - 59 Introduction to Business - 63 Principles of Financial Accounting- 54 ASBA - TESC - graduation applied for!!! BSBA - general management in progress Currently taking it easy through the holidays and taking my remaining 12 FEMA courses. |
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Then how come the "Average Grade" for the next assignment is already listed at 100 but my particular submission for that assignment hasn't been graded yet? How can they come up with an average without having averaged all the grades?
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DONE! History degree from TESC! CLEPS: College Math-69, Sociology-70, Humanities-72, Am. Lit-61, English Lit-69, S. Sciences & History-65, Eng. Comp/w essay-75, Microec.-64, Macroec.-73, Western Civ. I-71, Western Civ. II-71, American Gov't-71, US History I-75, US History II-65, A&I Lit-77, Prin. of Mgmt-76, Prin. of Mktng-76. Biology-69 DSST's: Civil War & Reconst.-70, Modern Middle East-63, World Religions-76, Tech. Writing-67, Prin. of Supervision-67, HR Mgmt-69, Rise & Fall USSR-64, Vietnam War-60, Ethics-69. Intro to Bus-67, Org. Behavior-69, W. Europe-60 |
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Quote:
Ok- this had me too at first!! Like you, I had to ask on a message board. It doesn't seem that I could EVER find the "whats what" listed on the TESC sites, not sure why!?!? For each assignment, you get one grade. That is the calculated grade. That grade is yours and yours alone, which will be weighted according to the syllabus which will show as a % (a discussion grade might be 2% for example). Completely as an FYI, there is a column called "average grade" which shows the running tally of the papers your mentor has graded. If you were the first and only score - the score will be the same (100 and 100) but as soon as he starts grading other work the average adjusts. In your case, your assignment hasn't been graded yet, but you can tell he is in the process of grading BECAUSE there is an average showing- in other words, he has graded at least one of your class mate's papers. It's common, for example, to get a 100 on a discussion- so often you will see 100s as the averages for discussions. Written work is usually more interesting to look at since most mentors don't give everyone 100s on those. You have no way of knowing how many papers he has graded- could be 2, could be 10, only the average. The average is fun to look at- but doesn't play any part in your final grade- so you just want to use your actual calculated scores to see how you are doing. Hope that helps!!
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Jennifer ALM, Psychology, Harvard University, in progress AA & BA, Social Sciences, Thomas Edison State College, 2008 AOS, Culinary Arts, Culinary Institute of America, 1990 IC WORKS! http://www.degreeforum.net/general-e...g-members.html "Brick walls are there for a reason. The brick walls are not there to keep us out. The brick walls are there to give us a chance to show how badly we want something. Because the brick walls are there to stop the people who don’t want it badly enough. They’re there to stop the other people.” Randy Pausch |