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Matos-Díaz, Horacio; García, Dwight – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2014
Over concerns about private school students' advantages in standardized tests, beginning in 1995-96 the University of Puerto Rico (UPR) implemented a new admissions formula that reduced the weight they previously had in the General Admissions Index (GAI), on which its admissions decisions are based. This study seeks to determine the possible…
Descriptors: College Admission, Private Schools, Gender Differences, Equal Education
Costley, Kevin C. – Online Submission, 2014
Grade inflation has been a consistently ignored problem in the public schools and universities for over fifty years. Grades keep getting higher and higher for a multitude of reasons. Students expect high grades. Parents demand high grades of their children and teachers. Some administrators implicitly or explicitly require that their teachers give…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Educational Practices, Guidelines, Student Evaluation
Maurer, Trent W.; Kropp, Jerri J. – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2015
This project reports the results of two studies that investigated the impact on course evaluations of using partial credit iterative responding (PCIR) with the Immediate Feedback Assessment Technique (IF-AT) forms on summative course assessments. This project also quantifies grade inflation from utilizing different PCIR schemes and documents the…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Course Evaluation, Summative Evaluation, Grade Inflation
Marx, Jonathan; Meeler, David – Quality Assurance in Education: An International Perspective, 2013
Purpose: The aim of this paper is to illustrate how universities play an institutional role in inflating student grade point averages (GPA) by modifying academic polices such as course withdraw, repeats, and satisfactory/unsatisfactory grade options. Design/methodology/approach: Three research strategies are employed: an examination of eight…
Descriptors: Grade Point Average, Grade Inflation, College Role, Policy Formation
Royal, Kenneth D.; Guskey, Thomas R. – Online Submission, 2014
A common practice in medical education is to create a prescribed distribution of grades, or ratings, so that only a certain percentage of students receive the highest marks. This approach typically is employed to curb grade inflation and as a means to help faculty distinguish outstanding performers. Despite the well-intentioned reasoning for using…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Medical Education, Grade Inflation
Barrett, David E.; Casey, J. Elizabeth; Visser, Ryan D.; Headley, Kathy N. – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2012
The authors examined the dimensions that underlie teachers' judgments about ethical versus unethical behaviors. 593 educators and teachers in training were administered a 41 item survey. For each item, respondents rated the extent to which they believed the behavior (a) occurred frequently and (b) represented a serious violation of professional…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Ethics, Evaluative Thinking, Standards
Caruth, Donald L.; Caruth, Gail D. – Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education, 2013
Grade inflation impacts university credibility, student courses of study, choices of institution, and other areas. There has been an upward shift in grades without a corresponding upward shift in knowledge gained. Some of the most frequently mentioned causes of grade inflation are: (1) student evaluations of professors; (2) student teacher…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Grading, Grade Inflation, Best Practices
Pattison, Evangeleen; Grodsky, Eric; Muller, Chandra – Educational Researcher, 2013
Grades are the fundamental currency of our educational system; they signal academic achievement and noncognitive skills to parents, employers, postsecondary gatekeepers, and students themselves. Grade inflation compromises the signaling value of grades and undermines their capacity to achieve the functions for which they are intended. We challenge…
Descriptors: Grading, Grade Inflation, Grades (Scholastic), Grade Point Average
Carifio, James; Carey, Theodore – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2013
The arguments and for and against minimum grading systems have grown increasingly more intense and acrimonious in the past decade. However, there has been an absence of empirical data, theory and clear comparative analyses of conflicting points of view. Critics of minimum grading contend that the practice will produce grade inflation and social…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Grade Point Average, Grade Inflation
Stringer, Neil Simon – Research Papers in Education, 2012
General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) and General Certificate of Education (GCE) grading standards are determined by Awarding Bodies using procedures that adhere to the Code of Practice published by the regulator, Ofqual. Grade boundary marks (cut scores) are set using subject experts' (senior examiners) judgement of the quality of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Exit Examinations, Grading
Grühn, Daniel; Cheng, Yanhua – Teaching of Psychology, 2014
Montepare suggested the use of a self-correcting approach to multiple-choice tests: Students first take the exam as usual, but are allowed to hand in a self-corrected version afterwards. The idea of this approach is that the additional interaction with the material may foster further learning. To examine whether such an approach actually improves…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Active Learning, Large Group Instruction
Smith, Michael A. – ProQuest LLC, 2014
Historically, final course grades of sixth- through eighth-grade language arts, mathematics, and eighth grade science students at the primary research site, Site A (pseudonym), suggest a high degree of grade inflation or disassociation when grade point averages (GPA) were compared to actual student performance levels as measured by annual state…
Descriptors: Grading, Fidelity, Action Research, Junior High School Students
Ali, Holi Ibrahim Holi; Al Ajmi, Ahmed Ali Saleh – Higher Education Studies, 2013
The use of student ratings to measure instructors' teaching performance and effectiveness in tertiary education has been an important but controversial tool in the improvement of teaching quality during the past few decades. This is an attempt to explore non-instructional factors of student evaluations by discussing and reviewing relevant…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, College Students, Semi Structured Interviews
Crumbley, D. Larry; Flinn, Ronald; Reichelt, Kenneth J. – Accounting Education, 2012
As administrators are pressured to increase retention rates in accounting departments, and higher education in general, a deadly symbiosis is occurring. Most students and parents only wish for high grades, so year after year many educators engage in unethical grade inflation and course work deflation. Since administrators use the students to audit…
Descriptors: Accounting, Business Administration Education, Ethics, Grade Inflation
Mostrom, Alison M.; Blumberg, Phyllis – Innovative Higher Education, 2012
When the grade distribution within a course shifts towards higher grades, it may be due to grade inflation or grade improvement. If the positive shift is accompanied by an increase in achievement or learning, it should be considered grade improvement, "not" grade inflation. Effective learning-centered teaching is designed to promote student…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Grades (Scholastic), Student Improvement, Educational Assessment