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Peer reviewedMillman, Jason; And Others – Research in Higher Education, 1983
Two studies examining the effect of grade inflation on the piling up of grades in fewer grade categories and on the reliability of grade point averages found that reliability suffered significantly only in graduate study in which almost all grades were in two categories, A and B. Some other small effects were found in different rating scales. (MSE)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Evaluation Criteria, Grade Inflation, Grade Point Average
Peer reviewedHendrickson, Hildegard R. – College and University, 1976
It is hypothesized that the average level of undergraduate grades has been increasing due to a change in grading practices rather than other fundamental factors. Printed sources were searched for the various reasons that have been cited and possible solutions are offered. (LBH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Records, Achievement Rating, College Students
Sraiheen, Abdulwahab; Lesisko, Lee James – Online Submission, 2006
School administrators in a small suburban school district in Southeastern Pennsylvania were concerned about grade inflation at the elementary and secondary levels. Specifically, they wanted to know if students in grades 5, 8, and 11 who scored at the basic or below basic performance level on the 2003-2004 Pennsylvania System of School Assessment…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Grade 5, Grade 11, Suburban Schools
Merrow, John – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2004
These days it seems as if nearly everyone in college is receiving A's, making the Dean's List, or graduating with honors. What is more interesting is that college students in general are spending fewer hours studying, while taking more remedial courses and fewer courses in mathematics, history, English, and foreign languages. Students everywhere…
Descriptors: College Students, Remedial Instruction, Grade Inflation, Educational Objectives
Johnson, Norbert; And Others – Southern College Personnel Association Journal, 1980
Results confirm the existence of grade inflation and indicate recent graduates have an advantage over those who enter graduate school 13 to 27 years after undergraduate completion. A correctional factor should be considered. (JAC)
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, College Admission, College Graduates, Grade Inflation
Beaver, William – College Board Review, 1997
College grades are no longer accurate indicators of what students know. Ultimately, students and employers will be shortchanged and the validity of higher education endangered. Factors contributing to grade inflation include emphasis on student self-esteem, new grading schemes, competition for students. Possible solutions include raised admissions…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, College Instruction, College Outcomes Assessment, Competition
Peer reviewedHassel, Holly; Lourey, Jessica – College Teaching, 2005
More than eleven hundred university students were surveyed to determine attitudes toward learning and accountability. Apathy, absenteeism, and grade inflation emerged as contributing to the lack of student accountability. This article suggests institutional changes to reanimate college classrooms: explicit expectations; smaller, engaged classes;…
Descriptors: Student Responsibility, Grade Inflation, Accountability, Student Attitudes
Liggett, Sarah L. – 1986
To discuss how training programs for new teaching assistants affect them and, more specifically how a training seminar affected the way they grade papers, twelve teaching assistants read about evaluation, participated in six paper grading sessions, and were assigned an experienced teaching assistant who checked sets of marked essays for validity…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Grade Inflation, Grading, Higher Education
Peer reviewedJohnson, Michael P.; Walsh, Edward J. – Teaching Sociology, 1978
Reports students' attitudes and achievement in a self-scheduled instruction (SSI) introductory sociology course. SSI entails division of course materials into sequential units which students must master at their own pace. SSI students reported greater learning than with other teaching methods. Test scores confirmed student reports. (Author/AV)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Strategies, Grade Inflation, Higher Education
Peer reviewedZangenehzadeh, Hamid – Journal of Economic Education, 1988
Reports a study of the interrelationship between grade inflation and student evaluation ratings. Findings indicated that unadjusted student evaluations are inappropriate determinants of tenure or promotion. An adjustment procedure to remedy the problem is presented. R.C. Scott criticizes Zangenehzadeh's model and proposes a different one.…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Grade Inflation, Grading, Student Evaluation
Kerr, Clark – AGB Reports, 1980
The major theme of the Carnegie Commission's report is that higher education has a good record for integrity. However, there are serious concerns: grade inflation, recruiting practices, vandalism. Governing boards can play an important role in addressing the problems. One example is the survey inspired by the University of Delaware board.…
Descriptors: Administrator Selection, Board Administrator Relationship, Ethics, Governing Boards
Bracey, Gerald W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
According to 1996 National Assessment of Educational Progress science results, there is no difference between private and public school performance by the time one reaches the 75th percentile of grade 12. Recent SAT scores for the top 20% of students indicate teachers are not inflating grades. The National Center for Fair and Open Testing…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Elementary Secondary Education, Grade Inflation
Farley, Barbara L. – 1995
According to recent research, from Ivy League universities to community colleges only between 10% and 20% of students receive grades lower than a "B-," while the most frequently given grade is an "A." Causes of this grade inflation can be found in students' objections to receiving "D's" and "F's" after paying high tuitions and even the…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Change Strategies, Community Colleges, Educational Improvement
Olsen, Danny R. – 1997
This study was designed to investigate the extent to which grade inflation has existed at Brigham Young University (BYU) after accounting for increased preparation levels of entering students over time. Analyses were conducted for the university at large and individual colleges. The study first developed a model to forecast student grade point…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Grade Inflation, Grade Point Average, Grading
Peer reviewedMcKenzie, Richard B. – Journal of Economic Education, 1975
This article concludes that as instructors inflate their grades, student evaluation ratings of instructors will increase. (DE)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Economics Education, Educational Research, Grade Inflation


