Wow, I'm shocked at the number of school districts that have adopted this grading scale. I'm in Loudoun County in NoVA, and several other from NoVA have added to this thread.
First, in Virginia, I understand it's not commonplace to deviate from the traditional 10 pt scale. This makes it harder for our students to get into state universities because they aren't looking at % (ie, 92% in Math) but at a letter grade on the transcript (ie, B). Worse, the overall GPA for the year is a raw number based not on the % grades, but the letters which are then weighted (ie, 4.0 for an A, 3.0 for a B).
So, to answer the points raised in this thread, I'm outraged because my child should not be excluded from scholarship money because his school district chooses a 7 point system which penalizes him with a 3.0 for a 90, when a student in another part of the country got a 4.0 for that same work, same score.
And, he's getting a 4.0 average now pulling straight A's even though they're harder to earn in his district since they moved up the floor to a 93. So why shouldn't his A count for more then? And why would a school district NOT weight an honors class to count for more than a standard class - - because it IS harder and requires more out of the students. Other than PE, my son is carrying ALL honors courses and works his butt off to keep an A average. But heck, he could drop down to regular classes and not have to work so hard, and many of his friends do so to maintain an even higher A average (an A+ instead of his A)
He is a gifted student, and I have no doubt he'll score well in the SAT's and ACTs, but we will need financial help to pay for college. So my district is not only punishing and demotivating their students with this stringent grading scale, but also financially penalizing its families by reducing our scholarship opportunities as well. I guarantee you the admissions boards are not looking at a %'ile grade for each course, but a letter grade. That is, when they even bother to look at individual course letter grades, rather than the overall GPA which is printed right on the transcript.
My point is this, my son's 4.0 GPA from a 7 pt school was harder to earn than another student's 4.0 from a 10 pt school. That is not a level playing field.