By Professor Doom
Yes, many college
degrees are worthless, but even among those supposed fields where a degree is
of value, there’s an issue that I only touch on from time to time: grade
inflation.
Suppose you’re an
employer, and you’ve already restricted applicants to some very job-specific
degree. Can you narrow it down further than that? Well, there’s GPA, but when
everybody always gets the same grades…not only can you not distinguish between
candidates, the obvious question must come to mind: “if everybody gets an A,
what does this degree stand for?”
Employers have
known of this issue for some time, but not that long:
--all paper
currencies become “Monopoly money” eventually, so I usually use the word
“confetti” to get across the same point.
They’re not just
talking about degrees in Theatre, Communications, or Gender Studies here, but
“real” majors have also lost value because you really can’t give a bad grade
without risk.
The National Association of Colleges
and Employers reported in 2013 that “66
percent of employers screen candidates by grade point average (GPA).”
Wow, even 6 years
ago employers were trying to use GPA for something. I honestly don’t know how
they could:
Consider these facts: A 50-plus-year
nationwide study of the history of college grading finds that, in the early
1960s, an A grade was awarded in colleges nationwide 15 percent of the time.
But today, an A
is the most common grade given in college; the percentage of A grades has tripled, to
45 percent nationwide. Seventy-five percent of all grades awarded now are
either A’s and B’s.
Please understand
that we have plenty of write-off students on campus. When the above says “75%”
of grades are A’s and B’s, I assure the gentle reader that pretty much any
student who tries will get such grades, and while a few students who never even
come to class will also get a good grade (roughly 1/3 at a community college)
the vast bulk of those “bad” grades go to students who can’t be bothered to
even show up the first day of class.
In case the gentle
reader wonders why, allow me to explain. A student complaint is bad for a
faculty member’s career…multiple complaints can be a career ender (two can be
enough to ruin a chance at tenure).
In 30 years of
teaching, the only students who ever complained about me were failing students,
and I’m hardly alone in making this observation. So, the message is clear: do
not fail students.
Trouble is, a
failing grade is no longer an F. Because D grades are so rare now, D’s are also
failing grades, so you can’t give those (anyone else remembered Charlie Brown
getting a D-, basically a pity grade?). But now C’s become rare…it really won’t
be long until awarding a B grade will run the risk of multiple administrators
at your door, asking you to justify why you showed such aggression against a
student.
Seriously, if 95%
of college graduates have all A’s and B’s, you know full well you’re really
hurting a student when you award a C. But we still push the fiction that C is
an average grade, even as we all know 95% of all students can’t be above
average.
When an A is
the most common grade given in college, how hard is it to graduate?
The article took
its time to identify the problem I identified at the beginning of my post. It
does provide some history on grading to put things into perspective:
in 1969, only 7 percent of students at two-
and four-year colleges reported that their grade point average was A-minus or
higher. Yet in 2009, 41 percent of students reported as same. During the same
period, the
percentage of C grades given dropped from 25 to five percent.
So basically only
one student in 20 is getting a C grade. Yeah, that’s “average.” I’m not a jerk,
I’d love for every student to be the best…but I know that awarding A’s to
everyone is hurting the top students far more than it’s helping the weakest
students. College was supposed to be an opportunity to distinguish yourself but
there’s no way to do that when everyone gets the same grade.
The article
presents a different problem with grade inflation:
But
grade inflation teaches young people the opposite lesson. It teaches them that
life is easy. This cannot help but to contribute to the coddled, “snowflake” mindset for which so many
millennials are today blamed by their elders.
Eh, I concede some
truth in the above, and I’ll even share a quick anecdote:
“I want my
money back.”
The above was a
complaint by a student in my college algebra course, a course little different
than what I learned in the 10th grade. The student didn’t buy the
book, came to class only sporadically, didn’t submit any homework assignments
(no book, after all), and missed half the tests (failing the others with grades
of 39 and 25 respectively, because…no book). As per my syllabus and any
reasonable consideration, I failed her.
I remember this
student because she then complained to admin, who asked me to justify in detail
why I dared to fail a student who was “concerned about her grade,” to quote the
written complaint which may still be in my permanent record at that community
college.
So, sure, I
suppose you could call her a snowflake, but I think money is the issue. The
article goes off the rails, however:
…the older generation—my generation—which has
been in charge and which was supposed to act like adults? We haven’t. Our
children are paying for our moral and educational lapse, which also is fraying
the moral fiber of American society as a whole.
No, the above is
rubbish. It’s not the older generation which has caused this. It’s the student
loan scam (I trust the gentle reader was sitting down when reading that,
because it’s so rare that I make such a claim that my doing so might cause
fainting).
The student loan
scam has caused tuition to skyrocket to ridiculous levels, and this in turn is
affecting our grading (with administrative pressure, supplied also by the
student loan scam).
If you spent $10
to see a movie, and the movie was terrible, you might well write it off as a
loss. How about $500? $5,000? For that kind of money, you’d complain bitterly
to management if you didn’t receive an incredible experience.
Well, suppose
you’re spending a mere $3,000, the low end price of a college course today.
You’re going to want the best possible outcome there, right? An F is
unacceptable…and an A is really what you want for that kind of cash. No need to
point fingers at a whole generation when simple economics explains what’s
happening.
Under legislation proposed in the
House of Representatives, the Texas “Contextualized Transcript” bill calls for
adding to transcripts the average grade given to the entire class for each of
the courses on a student’s transcript. This would apply to all Texas public,
two-year and four-year colleges and universities. Here is an example of what it
would look like:
“Geology: Individual Student’s Grade: A (Average grade for the class:
C+)”
The above is all
hypothetical, more accurately, pure fantasy. Granted, schools that did
something like the above would demonstrate integrity, and that would help
students dramatically…too bad our schools are not run with concepts like
“integrity” or “helping students” in mind.
They used to be
run in that manner, but the immense money from the student loan scam makes
those antiquated concepts. While the media screams about a few rich people
buying their way into Harvard and the like, realize student loan debt is close
to $1.6 trillion, and affects fifty million people in this country, if not
more…a few kids sneaking into Harvard means nothing next to that, and the grade
inflation hurts everyone in any event.
Very strong article. What you are describing is basically LOSS OF ALL VALUES and is the biggest news event which the media never touches. A professor from UC Santa Barbara said to me, 'Since 1968 the Mont St. Michel and a toilet have the same value.' Everyone gets the same grade no matter how they perform... this is the basic flaw of communism, the elimination of competition,equal outcome for all, now destroying the value of any college diploma.
ReplyDeleteWhy 1968? I believe education still had decent standards well into the 80's, I don't know.
DeleteI believe the standards were decent well into the 80s as well. That said, this is when many schools started to bifurcate their education plans, into "legitimate degrees" and "bogus degrees." You can find many state schools which experienced explosive growth around this time due to the "new and improved" degree system.
DeleteI graduated magna cum laude from the University of Colorado in 1963 with a 3.2 average and had received an "F" in Chemistry 101. Many courses were graded on curves, with equal number of low and high grades. Professor Doom is right on with today's essay on the baleful effects of today's grade inflation.
ReplyDelete