Schools issued written evaluations for centuries before anyone thought to rank children on a card.
The report card as a standardized document emerged in American public schools during the 1890s, as the graded school system expanded and administrators needed a uniform method for communicating student progress to parents.1 Earlier forms of school reporting existed, including narrative evaluations and exhibition days where students demonstrated their learning publicly, but the card format reduced a child's performance to a grid of subjects and marks.
The standardization followed the logic of the Prussian school model that had shaped American education through Horace Mann's advocacy. Age-graded classrooms, which grouped children by birth year rather than ability, required a system for sorting students within each grade.2 The report card was the sorting mechanism made portable, a document that traveled between school and home and created a permanent record of performance.
The letter grade system that now dominates American report cards was not universal until well into the twentieth century. Mount Holyoke College is often cited as one of the earliest institutions to use letter grades, with records from 1897 showing a scale that included the categories "Excellent," "Good," "Passed," and "Failed."3
The report card's format carried an implicit message: that a child's learning in complex subjects could be reduced to a single symbol, and that these symbols could be meaningfully compared across students, classrooms, and schools.
In Denmark, narrative evaluations remained the norm in early education through the twenty-first century. In Finland, students receive no grades at all until fourth grade.4 The American-style report card, with its letter or numerical grades issued at regular intervals, remains a distinctive artifact of a system designed to process large numbers of students through standardized benchmarks.