When a Grade Isn't Just a Grade: California Parents' Right to Challenge Unsubstantiated Marks Under Education Code § 49070
California parents frustrated by vague grading — a C+ with no rubric, no written criteria, and no clear explanation — often assume there's nothing to be done. Education Code § 49066 does give teachers broad discretion over grade determinations, and a grade is generally final absent clerical mistake, fraud, bad faith, or incompetency. But that's not the end of the analysis. A grade is also a pupil record, and under Education Code § 49070, parents have a statutory right to challenge the content of any pupil record on six specific grounds, including that the record is "an unsubstantiated personal conclusion or inference," "misleading," or "inaccurate." A grade awarded without a communicated rubric or defined criteria fits squarely within those grounds.
The § 49070 process is a real procedural vehicle, not a suggestion. Parents file a written challenge with the superintendent, who must meet with the parent and the teacher within 30 days and issue a decision. If denied, the parent has 30 days to appeal to the governing board, which holds a closed session and issues a final decision — reviewable by writ if the parent preserves the record. While the board cannot override the teacher's grade determination without giving the teacher an opportunity to be heard, it can and does order corrections when a grade lacks a substantiated basis. For families stuck in a loop of vague feedback and unexplained marks, § 49070 reframes the dispute: the question isn't whether the child deserves a better grade, but whether the record itself is supportable under the statute. At Leigh Law Group, we help California families navigate these challenges strategically — preserving rights, creating a clean administrative record, and holding districts to the procedures the Education Code requires.


