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Susan Smith; Neil Sutherland; David Allen – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
Higher education systems exhibit varying degrees of heterogeneity in approaches to undergraduate degree classification -- specifically for this Point of Departure: the wide variety of 'Degree Classification Algorithms' (DCAs) used to calculate students' final awards. To date, the impact of DCA variation remains an under-researched 'black box', and…
Descriptors: Academic Degrees, Classification, Algorithms, Higher Education
When Masses Meet Markets: Credentialism and Commodification in Twenty-First Century Higher Education
Tomlinson, Michael; Watermeyer, Richard – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
The institutional form and conception of Higher Education have changed through the growth of mass higher education, which in many national systems now operates on market logics. Drawing on theories of credentialism, this article provides a critical analysis of the inter-relationship between massification and marketization and examines a range of…
Descriptors: Credentials, Commercialization, Higher Education, Grade Inflation
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
Hazir Ullah; Abdul Wahid Qureshi; Rabia Ali – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
The issue of grade inflation has been studied in many countries across the globe, yet it remains under-researched in Pakistan. This study aims to understand grade inflation in Pakistani universities by examining the contributing factors and its consequences. The data for this study was collected through in-depth interviews of 20 professors from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade Inflation, College Faculty, Higher Education
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
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
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
Erin S. Lavender-Stott – Family Science Review, 2023
This paper is in conversation with Dyer (2023). Grading and assessment are integrated elements of 21st-century higher education with many viewpoints, and the two papers are two of these perspectives. In this paper, I present a course structure that focuses on scaffolding with student empowerment, growth, and success at the forefront of the design.…
Descriptors: Family and Consumer Sciences, Grade Inflation, Grading, Program Evaluation
Morrison, Andrew – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
This article discusses concerns raised by the Office for Students (OfS) and other policy actors regarding perceived grade inflation in undergraduate degree classifications in England. I employ a desert-based justice philosophical framework to argue that the criticisms made by the OfS can be understood in light of the position that degree…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students, Justice
Bachan, Ray – Studies in Higher Education, 2017
This paper examines the continual increase in the proportion of "good" honour degrees awarded by UK universities since the mid-2000s. This trend has brought with it the charge of "grade inflation" that may reflect falling standards in UK higher education. This issue has been raised in the national press and in government which…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Grade Inflation, Undergraduate Students
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
Galbraith, Diane; Mondal, Sunita – Research in Higher Education Journal, 2018
Research is available on the graduation rates among primarily on-line institutions and traditional universities, but not much on the effect of on-line classes within a university setting. According to Pew Research Center surveys conducted in spring 2011, 89% of four-year public colleges and universities offered online classes, and 46% of recent…
Descriptors: Graduation Rate, Online Courses, Universities, Business Schools
O'Halloran, Kim C.; Gordon, Michael E. – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2014
Higher education in the United States is facing increasing demands for colleges and universities to demonstrate what students learn and that they are providing a high-quality education experience during the undergraduate years (Pascarealla et al. in "Chang Mag High Learn" 42(1):16-22, 2010). Despite evidence of the elevation of grades in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Undergraduate Study, Grade Inflation, Educational Change
Schroeder, Nan – ProQuest LLC, 2016
The research area of this study is the phenomenon of grade inflation in higher educational organizations. Using a qualitative phenomenological research design, seven faculty members from a higher educational organization were purposefully selected to participate in a semi-structured, face-to-face interview. The participants were of various ages,…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Higher Education, Qualitative Research, Phenomenology
Finefter-Rosenbluh, Ilana; Levinson, Meira – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2015
Grade inflation is a global phenomenon that has garnered widespread condemnation among educators, researchers, and the public. Yet, few have deliberated over the ethics of grading, let alone the ethics of grade inflation. The purpose of this paper is to map out and examine the ethics of grade inflation. By way of beginning, we clarify why grade…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Ethics, Social Problems, Victims