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Board approves restructuring middle‑school Algebra I into two parts; B grade required for high‑school credit for middle‑schoolers

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Summary

The Contoocook Valley School Board voted to align middle-school Algebra I with high-school Algebra I by splitting the course into Part I and Part II; middle-school students will earn high‑school credit only if they achieve a B or better, the board said.

The Contoocook Valley School Board on May 20 voted to restructure middle-school Algebra I so it mirrors the high-school sequence (Algebra I Part I and Part II) and to set a B or better as the threshold for awarding high‑school credit to middle-school students.

District administrators presented the change as an alignment measure. Under the new approach, a middle-school student who completes Algebra I Part I with a B or better would be eligible to receive one high-school credit; a second high-school credit would be available for Part II with a B or better. Administrators said the final exams and grade-calculation formula would match the high school: quarter I and quarter II grades together would account for 85 percent of the course grade and the semester/final would account for 15 percent, consistent with high-school practice.

The administration cited a two-year review of outcomes for eighth-grade students taking Algebra I: officials said students who earned less than a B in eighth-grade Algebra I historically struggled in subsequent high-school math courses, in some cases earning failing grades and requiring remediation. As a result, staff recommended withholding high-school credit for middle-school students who earn less than a B so those students can repeat the course later in a setting that allows more time to master foundational skills.

Board members debated the trade-offs. Supporters said the policy favors long-term success by ensuring students have the needed foundation before it counts toward a high-school GPA. Some board members urged flexible, case-by-case counseling and noted that parents and students sometimes prefer to keep the credit despite a lower grade. Administrators said make-up options exist: students who do not earn a B can repeat the course in high school or return to an eighth-grade math sequence to shore up skills.

After discussion, a motion to adopt the restructuring and the B-or-better credit threshold passed on a voice vote. The meeting record shows the motion carried; the transcript records a voice vote but does not provide a roll-call tally.

Board members asked administration to document the policy and related handbook language clearly, including guidance for students and families about recommended next steps when a middle-school student earns less than a B.