Why do parents get mad over grades?

Some parents actually care. So, why do some parents get mad over bad grades? Probably because they see a lack of appreciation for all that has been invested in their child/student – and the resulting lack of effort put forth by said student.

Is 67 a good grade?

A score of 67% overall is a failing grade (as much as a 0% on an individual task). A student must have taken some zeroes on some of the tests or quizzes, or exam to perform this poorly. A 67% on an individual test, quiz or exam is automatically a 0% score. Yes, a 67% is a pretty bad grade.

What to do if you got a bad grade?

Here are some actions to take:

  1. Adjust your expectations. Students often think a grade is bad even when it’s actually much better in comparison to the class average.
  2. See where you went wrong. One critical way to deal with a bad grade is to learn from it.
  3. Get help.

What to tell your parents when you get a bad grade?

Tell them why you made a bad grade. Stay honest when you explain to them what happened. If you didn’t study, tell them. If you tried your best, but still failed, tell them. Something you could say is “I had a hard time understanding the material,” or “I didn’t study for the test, which led to me doing poorly on it.”

How do you cheer yourself up after a bad grade?

How to pick yourself up after a bad exam

  1. Let the emotion out. It sucks when you’ve done badly at something.
  2. Pick yourself up again. Once you’ve let that emotion out you need to pick yourself up, dust yourself off and get back to business.
  3. Don’t keep thinking about it.
  4. Try to put right what went wrong.
  5. Wait until results day to find out how you really did.

Is 67 a failing grade?

Master’s students must have at least a 3.0 GPA in order to graduate….APUS Grading System (Chart)

Grade Quality Points/ Grading Percent Description
C 2.0/ 76 – 73
C- 1.67/ 72 – 70 Undergrad: Below Average | Master’s: Failing
D+ 1.33/ 69 – 67 Undergrad: Unsatisfactory | Master’s: Failing
D 1.0/ 66 – 64 Undergrad: Unsatisfactory | Master’s: Failing