@kbink
I have not seen any difference in the new gradebook. What you are questioning is the way it has been done for at least several years. Many people wait until the end of the semester to start dropping grades. I do it right away and they start getting dropped with the second assignment (I don't have any "do not drop" rules for those assignments).
Grades start getting dropped as soon as there are enough grades so that there is always at least one grade remaining and the assignment group is not voided.
What you are doing is misreading the statement in the documentation. That's a very easy thing to do with the Canvas documentation as they don't always write it in the same way that people speak.
It does not say that you need 5 submissions before any grades will be dropped, it says you need 5 before all three will get dropped.
Assuming that you have a rule to drop 3 (without any "never drop" rules)
- 1 assignment in the group = none dropped
- 2 assignments in the group = 1 dropped --- not a violation of the documentation since this is not all three
- 3 assignments in the group = 2 dropped --- again not a violation of the documentation because this is not all three
- 4 assignments in the group = 3 dropped --- finally, we have all three dropped, but still not a violation of the documentation since they had one "never drop"
I have not tested the case they mention where there is a never-drop assignment, but it's not relevant to your example in the video.
As for the weirdness that you're showing, I suspect that not all of the columns in that assignment group are being showing on your screen. That could explain why it appears to be dropping all of the grades when it is only set to 2. That would also explain why you see assignments with the same score being dropped for some students and not for others -- there are likely other assignments off the screen in that assignment group that are getting dropped.
I did appreciate the captions as I was watching it while giving a test and couldn't turn up the volume.
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