Grade inflation: Is it really a bad thing?
Usually by the time they have entered grade school, students have become acutely concerned about the grades they are receiving relative to their peers. This concern, according to some anecdotal and statistical evidence, has resulted in a slow, steady upward trajectory of grades. Students and parents alike are placing more pressure on teachers to ensure students have competitive GPAs for college and grad school. This, critics contend, is effectively cheapening the value of an 'A.' But is grade inflation really a bad thing? The question perhaps is not so much if grade inflation is bad but rather the extent to which grades are viewed as the ultimate purpose of learning. Is getting good grades the point of attaining higher education or is actually learning the material? "Are grades signals to students about their mastery of content and the skills of a discipline? Are they ways for professors to establish credibility or purchase popularity? Or are grades meant to send messages to future employers, rather than to the students themselves?" (Tworek 2014)
One of the causes of grade inflation is the pressure teachers are frequently subjected to by students (and parents and administrators) to give students good grades. As the expectation arises that a 'B' is a mediocre grade and a 'C' is no longer a gentleman's C. But near-failing in the eyes of society, students are outraged when they do not receive top marks. As noted by a professor of communications at American University, Alicia C. Shepard (2005), in describing an encounter in one of her classes: "Why was I given a B. As my final grade?' demanded a reporting student via e-mail. 'Please respond ASAP, as I have never received a B. during my career here at AU and it will surely lower my GPA'" (Shepard 2005:1).
The student did not make a case as to why he or she did not deserve a B, merely stated that he deserved an A because that was the grade he was accustomed to receiving even though he had missed quizzes and turned in assignments late. The idea of an 'A' denoting excellence has long been abandoned, according to Shepard, which frustrates her. "The students were relentless. During the spring semester, they showed up at my office to insist I reread their papers and boost their grades" (Shepard 2005:1). Despite consistently lackadaisical efforts, including sleeping through exams, students still expected As. But perhaps what is so dispiriting about the situation described at American is not that students viewed As 'average' but the lack of attention they devoted to their work -- even honors students. It is questionable that the threat of poor grades really had an impact (poor grades were not enough to motivate a student to remain in the competitive honors program), rather there was an overall a lack of concern about their educations and learning the material. Students were more interested in wheedling better grades from professors (even relatively competent students with B+ averages) than what they were learning in class. Students were product-focused, rather than process-oriented. And it is the learning process that students should be excited about as undergraduates.
It could be noted that this is not quite the same thing as grade inflation. True, if students do not do the work, they should be penalized. But what about if all students are conforming to a high level of excellence? For example, "Princeton University changed its contentious grading policy. The university had previously limited the number of students who could receive A grades, but rescinded for a variety of reasons, including fears that the lower GPAs disadvantaged Princeton students on the job market and discouraged the top students from applying to the university in the first place" (Tworek 2014). Granted, the rationale behind changing this policy is extremely questionable. However, it seems equally dubious to penalize students for taking a hard class who do well, simply because some more students in the class do better than them, perhaps because they had a stronger background.
If students do genuinely 'A' quality work, does it really cheapen the A if many other students also receive As? One frequently-cited statistic to substantiate the notion that there is grade inflation is the fact that such a large proportion of Harvard grades are As. "A grades have been the most common grade at Harvard for 20 years, and the median grade there today is an A-" (Tworek 2014). However, given the caliber...
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