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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
Field, Kelly – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2011
Three times during the past decade, the Pittsburgh campus of Kaplan Career Institute was named "school of the year" by Kaplan Higher Education, a for-profit higher-education company with more than 70 campuses nationwide. The award recognized the college for its rapid growth and high graduation and job-placement rates. But some former…
Descriptors: Proprietary Schools, Private Colleges, College Faculty, Faculty College Relationship
Wongsurawat, Winai – Education Economics, 2009
While the nature and causes of university grade inflation have been extensively studied, little empirical research on the consequence of this phenomenon is currently available. The present study uses data for 48 US law schools to analyze admission decisions in 1995, 2000, and 2007, a period during which university grade inflation appears to have…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Law Schools, Standardized Tests, Economic Climate
Winters, Carla A.; Gurney, Gerald S. – College and University, 2012
When considering any type of alternative or special admission processes for incoming students, the university is charged with taking into account traditional admissions criteria such as high school grade point average (GPA) and standardized test scores as well as other attributes. These "other attributes" frequently include pressure to…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Grade Point Average, Admission Criteria, Reading Skills
Gordon, Michael E.; Fay, Charles H. – College Teaching, 2010
To examine the antecedents of perceptions of grading fairness, approximately 600 college students were surveyed about the prevalence and desirability of 1) teaching practices that assisted students to prepare for examinations, and 2) common test scoring manipulations used to transform poor scores into acceptable ones (e.g., curving low scores…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Grade Inflation, Scoring, Grading
Torrance, Harry – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2011
Internationally, over the last 20-30 years, changing the procedures and processes of assessment has come to be seen, by many educators as well as policy-makers, as a way to frame the curriculum and drive the reform of schooling. Such developments have often been manifested in large scale, high stakes testing programmes. At the same time…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Grade Inflation, Testing, Foreign Countries
Maiuri, Katherine M.; Leon, Raul A. – Association for the Study of Higher Education, 2012
Scott Jaschik's (2010) article "Who Really Failed?" details the experience of Dominique Homberger, a tenured faculty member at Louisiana State University (LSU) who was removed from teaching her introductory biology course citing student complaints in regards to "the extreme nature" of the grading policy. This removal has…
Descriptors: College Science, Biology, College Faculty, Teacher Administrator Relationship
Kariya, Takehiko – Journal of Education and Work, 2011
The emergence of a global knowledge-based economy has given rise to drastic changes in both higher education and employment. On one hand, governments in advanced societies have launched policies to expand higher education to compete internationally in educating and attracting highly skilled workers. At the same time, both global economic…
Descriptors: Credentials, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies
Yorke, Mantz – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2010
Relatively inexpensive studies that go beyond the boundaries of individual institutions have considerable attraction, particularly at a time when resources are under significant constraint. These studies can be viewed as existing under the rather larger umbrella of "supra-institutional research". Three examples illustrate the argument…
Descriptors: Institutional Research, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Research, Foreign Countries
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
Faurer, Judson C.; Lopez, Larry – American Journal of Business Education, 2009
Grade inflation in academic institutions. Is it a subject so complex and pervasive in education that it defies resolution? The issue of grade inflation is of concern to college students, faculty, administrators and future employers. There is much gnashing of teeth, some veiled threats, wringing of hands, and both written and oral discussion of the…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Grading, Evaluation Criteria, Evaluation Methods
Gray, H. Joey – Schole: A Journal of Leisure Studies and Recreation Education, 2008
Despite extensive research, grading and the potential for grade inflation remain areas of concern within higher education. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to obtain collective understandings regarding grading and pressures to inflate grades from faculty and instructors within a research-intensive university. The study focused on a…
Descriptors: Recreation, Grade Inflation, Grading, Case Studies
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
Iacus, Stefano M.; Porro, Giuseppe – Education Economics, 2011
Several studies show that teachers make use of grading practices to affect students' effort and achievement. Generally linearity is assumed in the grading equation, while it is everyone's experience that grading practices are frequently non-linear. Representing grading practices as linear can be misleading both from a descriptive and a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Grading, Student Evaluation
Koedel, Cory – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2011
Students who take classes in education departments at universities receive significantly higher grades than students who take classes in other academic departments. The higher grades awarded by education departments cannot be explained by differences in student quality or by structural differences across departments (i.e., differences in class…
Descriptors: Schools of Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Grades (Scholastic), Elementary Secondary Education