How long ago did they admit that? Have you given them enough time to actually get it corrected?Yes they did admit they had a problem with the grade that was put in incorrectly and would address that with the teacher
Would these other students have been singled out because of the same specific characteristic that you believe your son was - or is this a diverse group of students? Is it one teacher who entered grades wrong for one class, or are these several teachers who entered grades wrong in several different classes?There is a pretty good chance that it is not just my son but other students as well
I am not quite understanding you, so I hope that this is a typo.In one of the classes the grade was put in incorrectly. So when they averaged the semester 1 and 2 they used the correct grade which was lower than the one that was put in. for example, he had a 84 but they used a 79 for calculation,
The other grades semester 1 and 2 did not average out to be the yearly average
Focus more on the "loss of scholarships" than honor society. "Loss of scholarships" can be argued as a financial/monetary loss, and the damages more easily quantified ($) than the effects of not making honor society.This is a public school? My son is a senior. Three grades are wrong. About 4 points. The transcript was sent to colleges incorrect which affected his GPA and a loss of scholarships. If he earned those grades I want him to have them and that prestige. Also the county is not in compliance with the consent decree. If I cannot sue what can I do?
While correct, those scholarships would need to have purely academic requirements. For example, if the scholarship says all kids with a 3.8 GPA WILL be awarded the scholarship, then the OP would have a case, but if the scholarship lists the GPA as merely one of several requirements, then things might be murkier. For example, if the GPA opens the door, but the recipient is then required to have done x hours of community service, and write an essay that is reviewed by an award committee, then there is no guarantee that the child would have received the scholarship even if the grading error had not occurred.Focus more on the "loss of scholarships" than honor society. "Loss of scholarships" can be argued as a financial/monetary loss, and the damages more easily quantified ($) than the effects of not making honor society.
Additionally, grades alone are not enough for honor society. My district requires 2 letters of recommendation from faculty, an essay from the applicant, participation in at least 3 students groups (clubs, sports, performance groups) in addition to those good grades and community service.While correct, those scholarships would need to have purely academic requirements. For example, if the scholarship says all kids with a 3.8 GPA WILL be awarded the scholarship, then the OP would have a case, but if the scholarship lists the GPA as merely one of several requirements, then things might be murkier. For example, if the GPA opens the door, but the recipient is then required to have done x hours of community service, and write an essay that is reviewed by an award committee, then there is no guarantee that the child would have received the scholarship even if the grading error had not occurred.
But would those things override grades? In my experience they would not.Additionally, grades alone are not enough for honor society. My district requires 2 letters of recommendation from faculty, an essay from the applicant, participation in at least 3 students groups (clubs, sports, performance groups) in addition to those good grades and community service.
Even with an average above 99%, the completed application is required. Seems stupid, but yes, if you have the grades but don't do the other things, you don't get in.But would those things override grades? In my experience they would not.