"For uniformity and fairness, faculty members should discuss grading
and share grade distributions for each course. We know professors
who want to give lower grades but don't because they think everyone
else is awarding higher grades."
Tomorrow's Professor Msg.#444 CURBING GRADE INFLATION
Folks:
The posting below presents some useful suggestions on dealing with
grade inflation. It is by Phillip Wankat and Frank Oreovicz, in
ASEE Prism, October, 2002, Volume 12, Number 2 <http://www.asee.org/prism/>.
Copyright © 2002 ASEE, all rights reserved. Reprinted with
permission.
Phillip Wankat is head of interdisciplinary engineering and the
Clifton L. Lovell Distinguished Professor of chemical engineering
at Purdue University. Frank Oreovicz is an education communications
specialist at Purdue's chemical engineering school. They can be
reached by e-mail at purdue@asee.org.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: A Collaborative Model for Leading Academic Change
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
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CURBING GRADE INFLATION
Students learn more when the grades they get accurately reflect
what they've learned in the course.
In 1966, just over 15 percent of first-year college students carried
"A" averages in high school. By 2001, the portion had
jumped to 44 percent, according to an annual UCLA survey of college
freshmen. Ironically, those high grades require few hours of study.
Nearly 85 percent of high school seniors spend 10 hours per week
or less on homework. Clearly, there is grade inflation in high schools,
and students entering college expect to continue getting high marks.
And they do. High percentages of college students graduate college
with honors these days. Even graduating with a 4.0 is no longer
unusual. Yet, according to the National Surveys of Student Engagement,
another large study, the amount of time that college students spend
hitting the books outside of class doesn't coincide with their good
grades. Only 21 percent of college seniors spend more than 20 hours
per week preparing for class.
We believe that students learn best when grades accurately reflect
their achievement. Grade inflation can be controlled by establishing
certain procedures, such as a standard grading scale. For example,
90 percent and above is an A", 80 to 90 percent is a
B", 70 to 80 percent is a C", and 60 to 70
percent is a D". For an A", the work should
be outstanding, and to receive a B", it must be of professional
quality. In your syllabus, define your grading scale and refer to
it during the semester.
Although there shouldn't be much wiggle room, you do have to be
flexible when there is good reason. For example, if a majority of
students fare poorly on an exam and complain that it was too difficult-which
often means they did not have enough time to complete it-you can
adjust all the test scores upwards by revamping the grading scale.
For instance, if the highest grade in the class was an 88 (out of
a possible 100), you might add 12 points to every score.
If test averages for the year are between 30 to 50 percent or lower,
up to three-quarters of the class could flunk. It is obviously best
to give exams that are of reasonable length and difficulty, but
final grades can be adjusted to reflect the reasonably achievable
score in the course. You can determine this score from the second
or third highest grade in the course. Thus, if one outstanding student
achieves 882 points during the semester (out of a possible 1000),
but the next two highest scores are 698 and 690, use 698. (Give
the student with 882 points an A+" and ask him or her
to do a research project with you.) Then award grades based on the
grading scale you choose, starting with 698 as the highest achievable
score, rather than 1000. For example, if you use a 90-80-70-60 A-B-C-D
scale, the lowest passing grade becomes 60 percent of 698 or 419
points. A more generous 80-70-60-50 scale (with the lowest passing
grade at 349 points) uses the 50 percent" rule, in which
students must earn at least 50 percent of the achievable score to
pass the course.
For uniformity and fairness, faculty members should discuss grading
and share grade distributions for each course. We know professors
who want to give lower grades but don't because they think everyone
else is awarding higher grades.
We should also stop punishing students in departments that control
grade inflation. Basing university honors and other awards strictly
on GPA puts students in those departments at a disadvantage. Graduate
and professional schools and companies that hire new engineers must
allow for differences in institutional quality and grading standards
when ranking those all-important admissions or hiring decisions.
Grade inflation, like inflation in the economy, can be controlled.
Perhaps universities need to follow the lead of the Federal Reserve,
whose primary function is to keep inflation in check.
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