consequential mark
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]consequential mark (plural consequential marks)
- (education) A mark awarded to a student when assessing their work, on the basis that they followed the correct method despite arriving at an incorrect result or conclusion due to an earlier error in the work.
- I wrote 5 instead of 6 on the second line of my working, so my answer came out as –4 instead of 30, but thanks to consequential marks I still got 4 marks out of 6.
- 1989, Phil Race, The open learning handbook, page 87:
- Does the scheme allow 'consequential' marks when an early mistake affects later parts of an answer?
- 2006, Mike Cody, VCE Mathematical Methods, →ISBN, page 93:
- You can still pick up 'method' and 'consequential' marks if you make mistakes early in the question.
- 2008, Andrew Hume, Chemistry VCE 3 & 4, →ISBN, page 7:
- This is an example of a question in which consequential marks were available even if an earlier part of the calculation was incorrect.