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Kathleen D. Dyer – Family Science Review, 2023
Outcomes assessment in an academic family science program led to the accidental discovery of grade inflation that was causing impaction problems in upper-division major courses. The current analysis evaluates the effectiveness of a policy intervention designed to improve academic rigor in previously grade-inflated classes. The new policy required…
Descriptors: Family and Consumer Sciences, Grade Inflation, Grading, Program Evaluation
Andrei Ternikov; Mikhail Blyakher – Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 2024
Purpose: This paper focuses on the factors related to faculty workload in the context of resource scarcity to examine whether there is a relationship between them and grade inflation. Design/methodology/approach: As for methodological novelty, the authors created an indicator of students' expectations about grades that is related to grade…
Descriptors: Grading, Grade Inflation, Faculty Workload, College Faculty
Wang, Guannan; Williamson, Aimee – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
Course Evaluation Instruments (CEIs) are critical aspects of faculty assessment and evaluation across most higher education institutions, but heated debates surround the value and validity of such instruments. While some argue that CEI scores are valid measures of course and instructor quality, others argue that faculty members can game the…
Descriptors: Course Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Measures (Individuals), Scores
Nash, Julie Ann – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2015
Online education is growing rapidly and there is little doubt that it will continue to expand until it one day encompasses the majority of higher education course offerings. Higher education leaders agree that online education will continue to grow even in the face of a slight recent decline (Allen & Seaman, 2013). As the rise of online…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Electronic Learning, Educational Trends, Educational Quality
Management by Results: Student Evaluation of Faculty Teaching and the Mis-Measurement of Performance
Langbein, Laura – Economics of Education Review, 2008
Using data on 4 years of courses at American University, regression results show that actual grades have a significant, positive effect on student evaluations of teaching (SETs), controlling for expected grade and fixed effects for both faculty and courses, and for possible endogeneity. Implications are that the SET is a faulty measure of teaching…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Student Evaluation, Grade Inflation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance
Meadows, Sara; Herrick, David; Witt, Marcus – British Educational Research Journal, 2008
The aim of the National Numeracy Strategy is to raise standards in numeracy. Strong evidence for its success has, however, been lacking: most of the available data come from performance on National Test assessments administered in schools or from Ofsted reports, and is vulnerable to suggestions of bias. An opportunistic analysis of data from a…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Numeracy, Arithmetic, National Competency Tests
Hu, Shouping, Ed. – ASHE Higher Education Report, 2005
College grades play important educational and social roles (Milton, Pollio, and Eison, 1986; Walvoord and Anderson, 1998). What is not well understood are the types of problems that exist in college grading practices. Conversations about grade inflation in higher education are often based on sparse anecdotal evidence and charged with value…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Higher Education, Grading, Validity
Cavanaugh, Joseph K. – Quality Assurance in Education: An International Perspective, 2006
Purpose: This study investigates how the increased use of part-time and nontenure-track instructors may result in grade inflation. Design/methodology/approach: This research uses ten years of registrar data at a Midwest State (USA) institution to perform a multiple regression grade analysis. Findings: Evidence is found that part-time and…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Multiple Regression Analysis, Part Time Faculty, Nontenured Faculty
DeSchryver, Dave – 1998
U.S. student scores in science compare unfavorably with those of other nations, and other standardized test scores by U.S. students are also comparatively lower. Polls of parents indicate dissatisfaction with U.S. education. College teachers and employers feel that high school graduates are weak in skills. This document offers negative perceptions…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Assessment, Educational Quality, Elementary Secondary Education
Farley, Barbara L. – 1995
According to recent research, from Ivy League universities to community colleges only between 10% and 20% of students receive grades lower than a "B-," while the most frequently given grade is an "A." Causes of this grade inflation can be found in students' objections to receiving "D's" and "F's" after paying high tuitions and even the…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Change Strategies, Community Colleges, Educational Improvement

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
Handleman, Chester – 1979
The downward trend in educational quality, as evidenced by sinking Scholastic Aptitude Test scores and other evaluatory measures, is examined. Both secondary school teachers and university faculty are held accountable for lowering academic standards, and much critical attention is paid to the precipitant implementation of innovative educational…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Accountability, Educational Innovation
Collins, Janet; Nickel, K. N. – 1979
Focusing on current grading practices, this report details a survey of 443 respondents from both four- and two-year institutions of higher education. The data are compared with a 1973-74 survey of the same institutions. Findings show that in general more stringent policies are enforced in the use of nontraditional grading practices, in making-up…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Probation, Academic Standards, Admission Criteria
Germain, Marie-Line; Scandura, Terri A. – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2005
The media has recently exposed that grade inflation is a concern for higher education in North America. Grade inflation may be due to consumerism by universities that now compete for students. Keeping students happy (and paying) may have been emphasized more than learning. We review the literature on faculty evaluation and present a model that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Grade Inflation, Faculty Evaluation, Individual Differences