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Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Grades are broken. Students grub for them, pick classes where good ones come easily, and otherwise hustle to win the highest scores for the least learning. As a result, college grades are inflated to the point of meaninglessness--especially to employers who want to know which diploma-holder is best qualified for their jobs. An alternative is to…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Grade Inflation, Grade Point Average, Academic Achievement
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Some faculty members at Texas A&M University will each be $10,000 richer next month, and they will have their students to thank. This article reports that the university system is awarding bonuses ranging from $2,500 to $10,000 to faculty members who received the highest grades on end-of-semester student evaluations. The competition is being…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, College Faculty, Merit Pay, Rewards
Bartlett, Thomas; Wasley, Paula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Grade inflation is among the oldest and thorniest problems in higher education. In 1894 a committee at Harvard University reported that A's and B's were awarded "too readily." But after more than a century of fulmination, there is little agreement on the cause or how to fix it. There is even contentious debate about whether the phenomenon of grade…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Grade Inflation, Academic Standards, Change Strategies
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2002
Explores the story of a former mathematics profesor at Temple University who says he was fired because he upheld academic standards; the college says he graded too hard. (EV)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, College Faculty, College Mathematics, Grade Inflation
Healy, Patrick – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
Georgia's merit-based HOPE scholarships, which cover tuition and fees for over half the undergraduates at the University of Georgia, are credited for bringing better students to the university but also for bringing pressure for grade inflation to the institution. Recipients must maintain a B grade average. The university has become competitive…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Admission Criteria, Competition, Grade Inflation
Gose, Ben – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
College faculty have been concerned about grade inflation for years, particularly at selective colleges, but the few recent attempts to remedy the problem have met with resistance or proved ineffective. Institutions feel pressure to grade as others do, and have abandoned efforts to develop stricter policy. In addition, teachers who do distribute…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Change Strategies, College Instruction, Educational Change
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
A University of Washington study that found professors who are easy graders receive better evaluations than those who are tougher, and another study showing faculty enthusiasm alone raises student evaluations, have shaken a long-standing consensus among researchers that student evaluations are a good measure of a teacher's skills. Most…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, College Faculty, College Students, Consumer Protection