Thursday, November 11, 2010
© Copyright 2013
Albany Herald
The Georgia Board of Education on Wednesday approved a time-line under which the change would take effect for freshman in the fall of 2011. However, the board still has to formally adopt a new graduation plan and the federal government must sign off.
Students currently must pass the state's graduation tests in core subject areas before they can graduate. They have several chances, starting in the junior year.
But state officials in recent years have said the graduation tests are redundant and they believe it's unfair to test students on subjects they may have taken their freshman year. As a result, the state wants to put more emphasis on end-of-course exams, which are given in eight high school classes and count for 15 percent of a student's grade.
Under the plan, as the graduation test is phased out, end-of-course exams would count for 25 percent of a student's final grade. During transition years, students could pass the graduation test or end-of-course tests in four key subjects to earn a diploma.
Students would still have to pass the high school writing exam, until that is replaced by new national standards scheduled to roll out in 2014.
More like this story
- State board officially votes to eliminate graduation test ( April 13, 2011 )
- DCSS considers math changes in 2012 curriculum ( March 22, 2011 )
- Dougherty County is one of 40 host sites for GHSGT math tutoring ( April 27, 2011 )
- Scores low for Monroe, Dougherty ( April 8, 2013 )
- Darton officials focus on retention rate ( August 16, 2010 )

