Research That Matters Podcast - A Global Deep Dive

Episode 18: Beyond Letter Grades: Does Standards-Based Grading Improve Student Achievement?

Loading...

Media is loading
 

Publication Date

2-18-2026

Description

This episode of Research That Matters is based on the article “Investigating the Potential Benefits of Standards-Based Grading Practices at Urban Secondary Schools in Southern Utah: A Qualitative Study,” published in the Journal of Nonprofit Innovation.

In this conversation, we explore whether traditional letter grades truly reflect student learning—or if standards-based grading offers a more accurate and meaningful approach to measuring achievement. Drawing from qualitative research conducted in urban secondary schools in Southern Utah, the study examines how educators, parents, and school leaders perceive grading practices and their impact on student motivation, anxiety, instructional clarity, and academic outcomes.

While letter grades remain the norm, participants identified concerns about grade inflation, subjective weighting, and a focus on points rather than mastery. The findings suggest that standards-based grading may better align curriculum with learning standards, improve communication about student progress, and strengthen instructional effectiveness. At the same time, implementing grading reform requires thoughtful leadership, stakeholder education, and cultural adaptation.

For educators, nonprofit leaders in education, and policymakers, this episode highlights how grading practices intersect with transparency, accountability, and student-centered learning.

Comments

This episode of Research That Matters is based on the article “Investigating the Potential Benefits of Standards-Based Grading Practices at Urban Secondary Schools in Southern Utah: A Qualitative Study,” published in the Journal of Nonprofit Innovation, Volume 3, Issue 3 (September 2023), available at https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/joni/vol3/iss3/6/. The audio version was created using Google’s NotebookLM to transform the published research into a podcast format, making the study more accessible through listening for educators, nonprofit leaders, and community stakeholders.

Share

COinS