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No Child Left Behind Act 20011
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Doug Lemov – Education Next, 2024
Grade inflation is causing student's hard work to be undervalued. As high grades get easier and easier to achieve, the highest grades can only go up so far. The difference between excellent and decent is compressed. Everybody wins is a system that guides and shapes the mindset of most American students--except a small number of kids who lose out…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Grade Inflation, Educational Environment, Academic Standards
Beach, Josh M. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2021
What do students learn in school? In the 21 century, this question has become a political dilemma for countries around the globe. It is a deceptively simple question, but there has never been an easy answer. The problem of measuring student learning appears to express an educational problem: What and how much do students learn? Most student…
Descriptors: Learning, Accountability, Grade Inflation, Evaluation Problems
Henrekson, Ebba; Andersson, Fredrik O. – EdChoice, 2022
This report seeks to explore some of the reasons Sweden developed an independent school sector dominated by for-profit schools by drawing on prior scholarship and reports as well interview material from Swedish school entrepreneurs, researchers, and prior public representatives that helped create and implement the Swedish voucher program. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Vouchers, School Choice, Proprietary Schools
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Chowdhury, Faieza – Journal of Education and Learning, 2018
Academic institutions worldwide, from primary schools to universities, use grades or marks as a fundamental sorting and signaling mechanism for students. The grades awarded to students should be indicative of learning outcomes. However, do the grades awarded today accurately reflect student achievement in the classroom? Grade inflation has become…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Student Evaluation, Teacher Behavior, Teacher Attitudes
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Wennström, Johan – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
In a radical school choice reform in 1992, Sweden's education system was opened to private competition from independent for-profit and non-profit schools funded by vouchers. Competition was expected to produce higher-quality education at lower cost, in both independent and public schools. This two-pronged study first examines to what extent the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Competition, Educational Vouchers
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Schneider, Jack; Hutt, Ethan – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2014
This article provides a historical interpretation of one of the defining features of modern schooling: grades. As a central element of schools, grades--their origins, uses and evolution--provide a window into the tensions at the heart of building a national public school system in the United States. We argue that grades began as an intimate…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Educational History, Educational Change
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Barrett, David E.; Casey, J. Elizabeth; Visser, Ryan D.; Headley, Kathy N. – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2012
The authors examined the dimensions that underlie teachers' judgments about ethical versus unethical behaviors. 593 educators and teachers in training were administered a 41 item survey. For each item, respondents rated the extent to which they believed the behavior (a) occurred frequently and (b) represented a serious violation of professional…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Ethics, Evaluative Thinking, Standards
Koedel, Cory – American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2011
Students who take education classes at universities receive significantly higher grades than students who take classes in every other academic discipline. The higher grades cannot be explained by observable differences in student quality between education majors and other students, nor can they be explained by the fact that education classes are…
Descriptors: Education Majors, Schools of Education, Grade Inflation, Grading
Levinson, Meira, Ed.; Fay, Jacob, Ed. – Harvard Education Press, 2016
Educators and policy makers confront challenging questions of ethics, justice, and equity on a regular basis. Should teachers retain a struggling student if it means she will most certainly drop out? Should an assignment plan favor middle-class families if it means strengthening the school system for all? These everyday dilemmas are both utterly…
Descriptors: Ethics, Justice, Equal Education, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Carifio, James; Carey, Theodore – Educational Horizons, 2010
Although schools have always struggled with student failure, retention, and attrition, the turn of the new century has produced added pressures for schools to reduce student dropout rates. In the current political and economic environment, increased costs and reduced budgets are forcing difficult choices in how best to spend limited resources.…
Descriptors: Locus of Control, Grade Inflation, Self Efficacy, Dropout Rate
Martins, Pedro S. – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2010
There is great interest in understanding the potential of teacher incentives to improve student achievement. In fact, teacher incentives, either individual or collective, may improve student achievement if they succeed in aligning the public or social goals with the goals of the teacher. However, an approach in which reward is based on outputs can…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Grade Inflation, Incentives, Academic Achievement
Laurie, Robert – Education Canada, 2009
The practice of handing out excellent grades to students who don't deserve them (grade inflation) is not a new phenomenon. Indeed grade inflation is among the oldest and most difficult issues to address in higher education. The author first studied the impact of grade inflation on student performance on standardized tests at the high school level…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Standardized Tests, Academic Achievement, Correlation
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White, Harold B. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2009
The concurrent improvement in average grades earned by college graduates would seem to indicate better quality students, although some observers attribute that to grade inflation. From the author's perspective derived from almost four decades of teaching at one institution, students are intellectually as good as ever; however, the author sees a…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Grade Inflation, Academic Achievement, Epistemology
Sraiheen, Abdulwahab; Lesisko, Lee James – Online Submission, 2006
School administrators in a small suburban school district in Southeastern Pennsylvania were concerned about grade inflation at the elementary and secondary levels. Specifically, they wanted to know if students in grades 5, 8, and 11 who scored at the basic or below basic performance level on the 2003-2004 Pennsylvania System of School Assessment…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Grade 5, Grade 11, Suburban Schools