Latest findings on the phenomenon of Grade Inflation
and what they could mean for us
NTUSU Tribune
Opinions - August 2011
Opinions - August 2011
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“In the 1960s C was the most common grade given on college
campuses,” said Stuart Rojstaczer, co-author of a recent American study exploring
grade inflation, on a KUOW radio show (I plead guilty on the count of
radio-listening). I switched tabs on my browser to a New York Times article about the same study. “Most recently nearly
43% of all letter grades given were A’s.” My jaw may or may not have hit the
floor at this point. The study went on to say that students were studying, on
average, ten hours a week less than they used to back in the 60s. Also,
students were learning less in college. Translation- students are not getting
smarter or working harder, they’re just getting higher grades.
As a student I can’t honestly condemn anything that results in me
getting higher grades, especially when it allows for fewer all-nighters.
Pragmatically speaking, we’re in a really competitive environment and no one
wants a lower CGPA. When selecting courses, the average grade for the course in
previous semesters is always a question posed to veterans of the course. Is it
deplorable that we sometimes take courses because they offer higher grades over
others that may be more interesting?
Deplorable or not, grade inflation is definitely a negative externality
for society. With low grades becoming something of a rarity, students who would
in the past not be able to pass certain subjects, now do. This does not help
the quality of professionals that step out into the workplace. Do you really
want to visit a doctor who isn’t that good but graduated anyway? Would you want
to drive over a bridge constructed by a dodgy civil engineer? I think not!
Secondly, if the quality of the work done by students is not
reflected in the grading, then that erodes the trustworthiness of grades as a
measure of academic proficiency. Furthermore, cut-offs for entry into graduate
programs and minimum requirements for jobs keep inching upwards to
unprecedented levels. This is turn could increase pressure on colleges to allow
even higher grades, creating a vicious cycle. Eventually then we can all just get A’s by default and
education and college will cease to have any semblance of a relationship!
The study in question is entitled “Where A Is Ordinary: The Evolution of American College and University
Grading, 1940–2009”. Clearly the study does not include NTU. However, it does
make one wonder if such a phenomenon exists in Singapore as well. It’s
difficult to decipher with certainty but, from personal experience, A’s and B’s
do seem to constitute a majority of the grades, although not quite the 73%-86%
of US universities. It is possible that we experience grade inflation, but to a
lesser extent than the US.
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