I'm doing again.

Because I can't realistically keep a sense of the progress of each of 50+ students in my head, I give a number for each assignment:

0: Turned in nothing or a blank document.
1: Significantly incomplete.
2: Basically complete. For programming assignments, passes all unit tests.
3: Above and beyond -- perhaps tackled an optional challenge problem.

Several 0s and 1s indicate a problem to be addressed. 2 is by far the most common result. If a student wants to argue for an A, they should have a few 3s.

**The question: should I show these numbers to the students?**

Pro: It give them a sense of how they're doing, and therefore how much energy they need to allocate to this class.

Con: They will look at the number, think of it as a "grade", and pay no attention to written feedback.

Thoughts?

Follow

@peterdrake Without actually answering the question directly, I can throw in another pro and con:

Pro: Transparency with students helps illustrate what is important in their work, and how they perform against these criteria.

Con: Transparency also allows students to attempt to game the system, taking up more of your time and distorting fairness in favor of the good game players.

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