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Peer reviewedDavidson, James F. – Educational Record, 1975
Traces the causes and effects of the devaluation of honors grades over the past fifteen years noting particularly effects on transcripts and grades as a means of exchange and suggesting faculty responsibility for restoration of academic standards. (JT)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Accountability, Employer Attitudes
Presley, John C. – 1981
Most English teachers probably find it difficult to develop a grading system that takes into account the problems of individual students and that effectively communicates to students the quality of their work. Educators have been experimenting with written grading systems since the first system, one of predetermined adjectives, was used at Yale…
Descriptors: Educational History, English Instruction, Grade Inflation, Grades (Scholastic)
Cahn, Steven M. – 1978
A number of factors have contributed to the inflation of grades in higher education, including: the belief that grades traumatize and dehumanize students; the conviction that academic standards are unfair in light of the equality of each individual; teachers' hesitation to fail high-risk or open enrollment students; the influence of popular…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Administrator Role, Educational Problems, Educational Trends
Chase, Alston – Atlantic, 1978
Declining academic standards will not improve unless institutions of higher education reject the new form of relativism, which continues to be the prevailing educational philosophy. Examples of declining standards are reported, and educational philosophies and the phenomena which encourage the persistence of the current ideology are examined. (JMD)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, College Credits, Curriculum Evaluation, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedBirnbaum, Robert – Journal of Higher Education, 1977
The hypothesis analyzed in this study is that grade "inflation" may be reflecting real increases in student achievement, demographic factors that may be related to grading, or institutional grading policies that permit grade point averages to rise even if grading standards remain unchanged. (Editor/LBH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Administrative Policy, Demography
Peer reviewedStage, Frances K.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Education, 1984
Given the increased data-based capabilities of educational institutions, educational researchers should have more opportunities to use sequential designs. This paper illustrates how to analyze educational data from a cohort-sequential design. University data pertaining to grade inflation were analyzed using a variant of multiple regression.…
Descriptors: Change, Cohort Analysis, College Students, Data Analysis
Wood, Anda L.; Ridley, Dennis R.; Summerville, Richard M. – 1999
This paper presents a new method to test for grade inflation. Defining grade inflation as the decreasing value of grades in the coin of student achievement, the study avoids the assumption that a rise in mean grade is a necessary condition of grade inflation. The study, which was conducted at a single university, also sought to determine whether…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Research
Peer reviewedOliphant, Robert – Liberal Education, 1980
Higher education, it is suggested, has lost much public confidence because of the problem of overinflated grading standards. Relative performance standings of all students in a course could correct the inconsistencies. "Extra academic record" evaluations are seen as expensive, draining faculty time and university resources. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Class Rank, College Students
Peer reviewedSummerville, Richard M.; And Others – College Teaching, 1990
A study of whether true grade inflation existed at a college, the scope of the problem if it existed, and what corrective steps, if any, ought to be taken was limited to the years 1979-1986. Data suggest that true grade inflation probably exists or cannot be ruled out. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Colleges, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedZirkel, Perry A. – Teachers College Record, 1999
Grade inflation pervades U.S. schools at all levels, and it is particularly pronounced in the humanities fields and in departments, schools, and colleges of education (DSCEs). This problem presents a leadership opportunity for DSCEs to develop and implement a credible and meaningful grade distribution system to combat pervasive grade inflation.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Grade Inflation, Grade Point Average, Grades (Scholastic)
Peer reviewedMartinson, David L. – College Teaching, 2004
Few would disagree that grade inflation is a major problem at colleges and universities across the country. In this article, the author argues that a significant contributing factor-perhaps the single most important factor has been the institution of the now almost universal practice of administering anonymous, multiple-choice student evaluations…
Descriptors: Grade Inflation, Grading, Student Evaluation, Multiple Choice Tests
Cushman, Thomas – Academic Questions, 2003
There has been much high-blown rhetoric lately about the problem of grade inflation in American higher education. All across American campuses, deans and college presidents lament the problem. Such attention, though, focuses mostly on outlining the extent of the problem rather than offering concrete strategies for alleviating it. In most cases,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Academic Standards, Admission Criteria, Faculty Workload
Roman, Brenda J. B.; Trevino, Justin – Academic Psychiatry, 2006
Objective: Universally, clerkship grading is diverse and not standardized. The authors' faculty was troubled by the inability to provide meaningful evaluations, as more than 60% of students received the highest grade. Although a psychiatry clerkship mandate of a faculty-observed student clinical interview existed for several years, the majority of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Medical Students, Student Evaluation, Grade Inflation
Mullen, Robert – 1995
The first-year performance of freshmen between 1987 and 1992 was investigated for evidence of grade inflation. Grade inflation is defined as "when a grade is viewed as being less rigorous than it ought to be". Performance data were analyzed for fall semester admissions of full-time, first-time freshmen at the University of Missouri…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Aptitude Tests, Class Rank, College Entrance Examinations
Ziomek, Robert L.; Svec, Joseph C. – 1995
Although much speculation has been devoted to concerns over the existence and degree of grade inflation at the high school level, there exists a lack of current empirical data documenting the extent, if it exists, of this phenomenon. This study was designed to investigate evidence of the existence, persistence, and degree of grade inflation by…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Entrance Examinations, Educational Trends, Grade Inflation

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