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Showing 1 to 15 of 114 results Save | Export
Dan Goldhaber; Maia Goodman Young – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER), 2023
There is widespread speculation (e.g., Johnson, 2021; Klinger et al., 2022; Mathews, 2022; Walker, 2021) and some evidence (e.g., Sanchez & Moore, 2022, Sanchez, 2023) that grading standards have changed over the course of the pandemic, making higher grades relatively easier to achieve and less reflective of objective measures of learning. It…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grade Inflation, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Dan Goldhaber; Maia Goodman Young – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2024
There is widespread speculation and some evidence that grades and grading standards changed during the pandemic, making higher grades relatively easier to achieve. In this paper we use longitudinal data from students in Washington State to investigate middle and high school grades in math, science, and English pre- and post-pandemic. Our…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Academic Achievement, Grade Inflation, COVID-19
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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
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Denning, Jeffrey T.; Eide, Eric R.; Patterson, Richard W.; Mumford, Kevin J.; Warnick, Merrill – Education Next, 2022
At least one third of all U.S. college students don't get a degree, even six years after they enroll. Earlier research focusing on trends through 1990 found broad declines in college graduation rates, especially among men attending less-selective four-year schools. Since then, however, the picture of college enrollment has changed dramatically,…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Grade Point Average, Graduation Rate, Student Characteristics
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Maamari, Bassem E.; Naccache, Hiba S. – Journal of Global Education and Research, 2022
Asking students to evaluate teaching faculty by every ending semester in modern education is an established trend. In the higher education circles, it is validated based on a large body of research showing a relationship between these evaluations and students' achievement. The arising problem is whether this relation is positively associated or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade Inflation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, College Students
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Jephcote, Calvin; Medland, Emma; Lygo-Baker, Simon – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2021
The move from elite to mass systems of higher education has been accompanied by concerns relating to the quality of provision and standards, particularly in relation to the increasing proportion of higher grades awarded to students. Bayesian multilevel models were used to investigate the temporal trend of grade attainment in 101 higher education…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Grades (Scholastic), Academic Achievement, Intelligence
Haladyna, Thomas M. – IDEA Center, Inc., 2019
The author discusses valid and reliable ways to assign grades in an academic course in any discipline. "Validity" means the accuracy of a grade's reflection of student learning and achievement. "Reliability" concerns the degree of random error that might be present and affect validity. First the author defines a grade as a…
Descriptors: Grading, Validity, Reliability, Evaluation Criteria
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Jones, Jeffrey S.; Ragan, Kent P.; Witte, H. Douglass; Zhang, Y. Jenny – Journal of Education for Business, 2022
The authors examine the impact of a new online learning system on student performance in a core finance course required of all business majors. They find that the online learning system significantly reduces the number of students that withdraw from the course prior to course completion. Additionally, the benefits of a lower withdrawal rate…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Finance Occupations, Integrated Learning Systems, Academic Achievement
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O'Neill, Michael – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2019
The UK's HE system is mired in public debate around 'grade inflation', and there is substantial pressure to address the perceived devaluation of degrees through blunt policy measures such as modifying classification algorithms. Policy-makers should be aware of the impact of their actions upon students' learning; this article frames some of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Academic Degrees, Classification
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Anne Vicary; Jeanine Treffers-Daller – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2024
Many overseas students in Higher Education in the UK struggle to understand the compulsory texts for their course, and obtain lower scores for their modules than their monolingual peers. While the existence of this achievement gap is well established in the literature, little is known about the ways in which overseas students in HE with limited…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Coping, Reading Strategies, Artificial Intelligence
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Lane, Cary; Schrynemakers, Ilse; Kim, Miseon – Community College Enterprise, 2020
This follow-up study to College Readiness in Post-Remedial Academia (Schrynemakers, Lane, Beckford, & Kim, 2019) analyzed faculty's perceptions about students' academic literacies, academic standards, and grade inflation currently, as well as compared to five years ago. The study was conducted during a multi-year developmental education reform…
Descriptors: Remedial Programs, Educational Change, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
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Hu, Ruolin; Trenkic, Danijela – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2021
Although most international students arrive with required language qualifications, many struggle with the linguistic demands of their programmes. This study explored whether the test-preparation industry undermines the qualifications with which students arrive. English proficiency of 153 Chinese student in the UK was tested on the Duolingo English…
Descriptors: Test Coaching, Test Preparation, Repetition, Testing Problems
Fajnzylber, Eduardo; Lara, Bernardo; León, Tomás V. – Stanford Center for Education Policy Analysis, 2018
A student's ranking in the grade point average (GPA) distribution has emerged as an admission variable that increases admission rates of both segregated minorities and high-performance individuals. In 2012, Chile's centralized university admission system introduced a GPA ranking variable relative to the previous cohorts' average GPA. Such a system…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade Point Average, Grade Inflation, College Students
Gershenson, Seth – Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2020
We know from previous survey research that teachers who hold high expectations for all of their students significantly increase the odds that those young people will go on to complete high school and college. One indicator of teachers' expectations is their approach to grading--specifically, whether they subject students to more or less rigorous…
Descriptors: Grading, Academic Achievement, Teacher Expectations of Students, Grade Inflation
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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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