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Hodges, Linda C. – College Teaching, 2014
This article describes the subject of "grade inflation," a reference to educators giving higher grades to student work than their expectations for student achievement warrant. Of the many reasons why this practice happens, Hodges specifically discusses inflating grades as "a natural consequence" when the faculty really…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Grade Inflation, Scoring Rubrics
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Gordon, Michael E.; Fay, Charles H. – College Teaching, 2010
To examine the antecedents of perceptions of grading fairness, approximately 600 college students were surveyed about the prevalence and desirability of 1) teaching practices that assisted students to prepare for examinations, and 2) common test scoring manipulations used to transform poor scores into acceptable ones (e.g., curving low scores…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Grade Inflation, Scoring, Grading
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Bloom, Davida – College Teaching, 2009
The results of a two-year study indicate that collaborative testing is a valuable pedagogical strategy that can both assess and enhance student learning. After finishing their first attempt at each exam, students were given a second attempt either working collaboratively in small groups or individually with open books and notes. Collaborative…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Cooperative Learning, Course Content, Weighted Scores
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Barriga, Alvaro Q.; Cooper, Eric K.; Gawelek, Mary Ann; Butela, Kristin; Johnson, Elizabeth – College Teaching, 2008
This investigation documents an intervention that successfully counteracted a grade inflation trend at a small, Catholic, liberal arts university in the eastern United States. The intervention produced a significant drop in grades awarded by full-time faculty, but not by adjunct faculty who were not yet included in the intervention. Institutional…
Descriptors: Intervention, Grade Inflation, Liberal Arts, Investigations
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Lippmann, Stephen; Bulanda, Ronald E.; Wagenaar, Theodore C. – College Teaching, 2009
While not representative of all students, those who demonstrate a sense of entitlement demand a great deal of instructors' time and energy. Our article places student entitlement in its social context, with specific attention to the prevalence of the consumer mentality, grade inflation, and the self-esteem of the student generation. We then…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Social Environment, Academic Standards, Antisocial Behavior
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Hassel, Holly; Lourey, Jessica – College Teaching, 2005
More than eleven hundred university students were surveyed to determine attitudes toward learning and accountability. Apathy, absenteeism, and grade inflation emerged as contributing to the lack of student accountability. This article suggests institutional changes to reanimate college classrooms: explicit expectations; smaller, engaged classes;…
Descriptors: Student Responsibility, Grade Inflation, Accountability, Student Attitudes
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Summerville, Richard M.; And Others – College Teaching, 1990
A study of whether true grade inflation existed at a college, the scope of the problem if it existed, and what corrective steps, if any, ought to be taken was limited to the years 1979-1986. Data suggest that true grade inflation probably exists or cannot be ruled out. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Colleges, Comparative Analysis
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Martinson, David L. – College Teaching, 2004
Few would disagree that grade inflation is a major problem at colleges and universities across the country. In this article, the author argues that a significant contributing factor-perhaps the single most important factor has been the institution of the now almost universal practice of administering anonymous, multiple-choice student evaluations…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Grading, Student Evaluation, Multiple Choice Tests
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Boretz, Elizabeth – College Teaching, 2004
The widespread acceptance of the phrase "grade inflation" poses a potentially damaging overstatement in reference to higher education. Grades are at an all-time high, but a review of the literature demonstrates that the improvement is not incongruous with a rise in faculty development programs and increased varieties of student support services.…
Descriptors: Grading, Consumer Economics, Grade Inflation, Higher Education
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Basinger, David – College Teaching, 1997
Inflated college grades reflect an underlying problem: inappropriate content, modes of presentation, and modes of assessment. Many popular assumptions about how to address the question of standards (modifying transcripts, freeing teachers from external pressure, using grades as an indicator of quality) emphasize grades rather than standards.…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Change Strategies, Classroom Techniques, College Curriculum
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Dreyfuss, Simeon – College Teaching, 1993
Discussion of student assessment at the college level looks at the relationship between grading and student learning and proposes an alternative system in which letter grades would be replaced with a two-part evaluation by the student and teacher. A practical compromise using letter grades is also outlined. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, College Faculty, College Instruction, Evaluation Methods