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The Grade Distortion Epidemic
History News Network ^ | 03-05-03 | David T. Beito and Charles W. Nuckolls

Posted on 03/07/2003 12:32:57 PM PST by bourbon

THE GRADE DISTORTION EPIDEMIC 03-05-03

By Charles W. Nuckolls, Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Alabama and David T. Beito, Associate Professor, Department of History. Both are members of the Alabama Scholars Association .

Throughout the last year, the issue of grade inflation has often been in the national media spotlight. Shocking revelations about the skyrocketing rise in the percentage of A's and the promiscuous granting of Honors awards at Harvard University especially have fueled debate. Despite this, some teachers and parents choose to console themselves with the theory that grade inflation is limited to the Ivy League or other elite private colleges. They would be wrong to do so.

According to the recent study, Grade Inflation at American Colleges and Universities, the grade inflation epidemic has infected many state-funded institutions which do not cater to an academic elite. A survey which we conducted for the Alabama Scholars Association reveals that it has taken hold in our own institution, the University of Alabama.

In our view, grade inflation must be examined as one component in a larger phenomenon: grade distortion.

We define grade inflation as the increasing percentage of high letter grades awarded to students over a defined period, unrelated either to improvements in student abilities or changes in instructional quality. A second subset of grade distortion is grade disparity. In some ways, it poses a far more serious threat to educational quality and basic fairness in grading. The level of grade distortion can be measured by calculating the differences between units internal to the university (colleges or departments) in the percentage of higher letter grades awarded to students in a defined period.

First, let us consider the best known component of grade distortion: grade inflation. The earliest available statistics for the University of Alabama from the early 1970s reveal that grade inflation was already well underway. An average taken of all four full semesters between the fall of 1972 and the spring of 1974 show that A's represented 22.6 percent of grades in all undergraduate courses. This was considered so high that the Office of Institutional Research at the University of Alabama warned at the time that "the percentage of A's and I's awarded has been steadily increasing" especially among undergraduates.

These warnings fell on deaf ears and grade inflation accelerated to new highs during the next three decades. Today, it has reached crisis proportions. In the last full semesters (fall 2000 to spring 2002), the percentage of A's in all undergraduate courses has risen to 31.1 percent, a startling 37.6 percent increase since 1974. One of the worst offenders is the College of Education where A's now constitute 55 percent of all undergraduate grades.

What has caused grade inflation at the University of Alabama? In 1996, the Office of Institutional Research attributed it to the "admission of better prepared high school graduates." There is little evidence for this claim. In the last 30 years, the average ACT scores for entering freshmen have increased by relatively little (from 22.9 to 24.5). According to Bob Ziomek, director of ACT program evaluation, this small rise "doesn't explain the whopping increase in A's being awarded."

Now, let us turn to the more serious component of the problem. We call it grade disparity. To view the issue in isolation, we have focused on the percentage of A's in the departments of the College of Arts of Sciences. In addition, we have limited our analysis to 100 and 200 level courses, the so-called gateway courses for freshmen and sophomores.

Because such courses are of an introductory nature, a traditional goal is to winnow out students before they can advance to more advanced courses. Thus, the percentage of A's in gateway courses is generally, or should be generally, lower than in 300 to 500 level courses. If the percentage of A's consistently exceeds 20 percent at this level, we believe that a serious grade inflation problem exists.

The disparities between departments in 100 to 200 level gateway courses are striking. The most inflationary department in the College of Arts and Sciences is Women's Studies. In the last two years, the average percentage of A's in that department averaged an almost unbelievable 78.1 percent. Other inflationary departments are Theater/Dance (51.4), Religious Studies (48.5) and Music (48.1). The five least inflationary departments are Biological Sciences (11.1), Geography (13), Geological Sciences (14.2), Math (14.6), and Anthropology (14.8).

Extreme grade disparity of this magnitude serves to undermine educational quality and standards. It also shortchanges the best and hardest working students. When grade disparity is rife, the overall Grade Point Average can no longer be said to adequately reflect comparative abilities. The grade of the A student in the course which demands little effort is placed on an equal plane with the student who has to struggle to earn the same grade in a more difficult course. The system creates perverse incentives for students to "shop around" for professors who have reputations for giving "easy A's" and thus degrades the efforts of those students who might otherwise take "harder" courses. The end result is that the student transcript loses its value a source of information for potential employers who need to judge the comparative qualifications of graduates.

What can be done to reduce grade distortion? Members of the Alabama Scholars Association supported a proposal that all student transcripts not only include the grade for the class, but also the average grade for all students enrolled in the class. Prospective employers could then get a better idea of whether that A- is to be admired or ignored, and the students would be less prone to shop for easy grades.

Unfortunately, the Faculty Senate of the University of Alabama rejected even this modest proposal. Indeed, it failed (and continues to fail) to take action of any kind. The University administration had proved equally unwilling to act. For this reason, we believe that the Alabama State Department of Education needs to publish an annual grade audit. Such an audit will serve to publicize grade distortion by showing the comparative levels of grade inflation and grade disparity in Alabama's high schools and colleges.

Mr. Beito is associate professor of history at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. He is the author of Taxpayers in Revolt: Tax Resistance during the Great Depression (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989) and From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State: Fraternal Societies and Social Services, 1890-1967 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000). He is now writing a biography (to be co-authored by Linda Royster Beito) of Dr. T.R.M. Howard, a black civil rights leader, fraternal society official, and entrepreneur.

This blog segment is co-authored with Charles W. Nuckolls.


Posted by David T. Beito at 5:05. EST


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy; US: Alabama; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: academia; bs; liberal; pc; rolltide
I suppose that grade inflation is likely worse at private universities.

Nevertheless, it seems to be pretty bad almost everywhere these days, and it saddens me that this kind of claptrap is going on at my alma mater.

Kudos to ASA for fighting these odious policies!
1 posted on 03/07/2003 12:32:57 PM PST by bourbon
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To: bourbon
I took Professor Nuckolls' Anthropology class when he taught over at Emory. He's a great teacher and a nice guy. And in fact I did get an A in his class. :o)
2 posted on 03/07/2003 12:39:46 PM PST by Maximum Leader (run from a knife, close on a gun)
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To: bourbon
Remember when a 4.0 meant that you had all A's? Now high school kids get varying levels of points depending on how hard the class was. Kids are graduating with 4.5 GPAs. Silly.
3 posted on 03/07/2003 12:50:03 PM PST by TankerKC (What's with the sudden influx of racist punks on FR?)
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To: TankerKC
You're right. It is ridiculous. The mob continues to define academic standards out of existence. (sigh).
4 posted on 03/07/2003 12:53:59 PM PST by bourbon
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To: bourbon
The disparities between departments in 100 to 200 level gateway courses are striking. The most inflationary department in the College of Arts and Sciences is Women's Studies. In the last two years, the average percentage of A's in that department averaged an almost unbelievable 78.1 percent.

LOL. Truly laughible. Shows how good that department is.

5 posted on 03/07/2003 1:06:06 PM PST by NathanR
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To: NathanR
bttt
6 posted on 03/07/2003 1:07:37 PM PST by Captain Kirk
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To: NathanR
I'll bet the 21.9 percent who didn't get an A were men...
7 posted on 03/07/2003 1:17:21 PM PST by IYAS9YAS (Go Fast, Turn Left!)
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To: TankerKC
Remember when a 4.0 meant that you had all A's? Now high school kids get varying levels of points depending on how hard the class was. Kids are graduating with 4.5 GPAs. Silly.

Actually, I don't think that's all that bad. In fact, it's more in line with what the author proposes, since it doesn't let kids get away with an 'A' in an easy course being equal to an 'A' in the hardest courses.

8 posted on 03/07/2003 1:20:54 PM PST by Sloth ("I feel like I'm taking crazy pills!" -- Jacobim Mugatu, Zoolander)
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To: Sloth
It becomes a matter of degrees. First everyone gets a 4.0 (A), so we create a special 4.5, then everyone gets a 4.5, so we start giving 5.0s...

I think it's pretty obvious when you look at a transcript that an A in Calculus is different from an A in Music Appreciation.

9 posted on 03/07/2003 1:24:35 PM PST by TankerKC (What's with the sudden influx of racist punks on FR?)
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To: TankerKC
That's true, but it's only half of the story. I graduated from high school three years ago; I was assigned two different GPAs, one weighted and one nonweighted. They always made clear which was which. I don't have the numbers off the top of my head, but I had a 2.75 or so nonweighted and a 3.35 weighted (which should say plenty about my high school experience - let's say that I didn't get along very well with some of my teachers during my first two years).

At my school, a point was added to your grade in every AP class we took, and a half point was added in every honors class we took. But the grades were calculated both ways, as was class rank, and they were always clear in drawing a distinction between the two.

I recognize what they were trying to do, which is to reward students for taking more difficult classes - virtually all of my classes during my senior year were at the AP level. But I think that in it all is each school's desire to get its students into the best colleges, and thus get more attention and state money.

Anyway, I thought it was all a bit silly then, and I still do. I'm a student at the University of Maryland - Baltimore County, and I fear that my fairly high GPA isn't worth as much when put alongside the grades of kids who are very likely the beneficiaries grade inflation (I'd like to think that my own grades are legitimate). In fact, I feel like my accomplishments - I'm on track to graduate with two degrees, one in English Literature with a minor in Creative Writing and another in Mathematics with a minor in economics - aren't worth as much because of it, much like I imagine those black students who earned their way feel cheapened by affirmative action.
10 posted on 03/07/2003 1:25:54 PM PST by JaimeD2
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To: JaimeD2; TankerKC
I agree that grade inflation is a big problem, TankerKC, but the course titles on the transcript aren't everything. For purposes of ranking students for graduation, it comes down to a number, and it hardly seems fair that a student who makes straight A's in Basketweaving and Home Ec should end up being valedictorian instead of the person who took Calculus and Chemistry but fell short of a 4.0 because of a 'B' one semester in band.

My high school used two different averages... a RPA (rank point avg) where all advanced classes counted on a 5-point scale, and the GPA, which was a 4.0 scales except for AP (i.e., college-level) courses which were 5.0. The RPA was used for class ranking, the GPA is what you reported on forms for college admissions, scholarships, etc.

The class immediately before mine had a guy get a special award for having straight A's (and he was undoubtedly a genius... went on to start at Texas Instruments at $50K with a mech. engr. degree). But he wasn't the valedictorian -- that was a girl who took more high-level classes than he did.

I myself was the valedictorian the subsequent year, with a 4.40 RPA and a 4.04 GPA, in spite of having 5 or 6 B's on my transcript.
11 posted on 03/07/2003 1:40:13 PM PST by Sloth ("I feel like I'm taking crazy pills!" -- Jacobim Mugatu, Zoolander)
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To: Sloth
I should add that in spite of my good high school performance, I was poorly prepared for college, because high school had simply been far too easy... ended up graduating with a 2.46 GPA in a chemical engineering curriculum.
12 posted on 03/07/2003 1:43:16 PM PST by Sloth ("I feel like I'm taking crazy pills!" -- Jacobim Mugatu, Zoolander)
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To: bourbon
This has been going on for a long time. I graduated from college 50 years ago this June. Even then, the School of Education on my campus was trumpeting how much better its students were than the other schools because they had a higher GPA. And yet everyone knew that, in the words of Thomas Sowell, education majors were "the dregs of the campus."
13 posted on 03/07/2003 2:27:54 PM PST by JoeFromSidney
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To: bourbon
Ain't it the truth?
14 posted on 03/07/2003 5:10:37 PM PST by Diddley
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To: Diddley
bttt
15 posted on 03/07/2003 5:15:10 PM PST by Captain Kirk
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To: Captain Kirk
This was my first attempt to use "Bump".
Did I do it correctly?
How did it "get" to you?

Thanks for your help.
16 posted on 03/07/2003 6:11:11 PM PST by Diddley
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To: Diddley
Looks good to me.
17 posted on 03/08/2003 7:21:56 AM PST by Captain Kirk
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To: TankerKC
They use the weighted GPA at an honors High school near me and for "honors classes" in regular High schools ..In some ways it makes good sense.. Does an A from a Honors calculus show the same thing as an A in Business math? So they tag on 5 points ..100 =105 That leads to the weighted GPA . Anyone that sees a 4.5 cum knows right away that the student was in Honors classes

I am a fan of the SAT's for that reason ..it seperates the wheat from the chaff .

18 posted on 03/08/2003 8:32:29 AM PST by RnMomof7
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To: TankerKC

I'd like to think I haven't jumped on the grade inflation bandwagon as much as most of my colleagues. Out of a class of 40 students, I only gave out one A and three A-'s. And more often than not, there's usually one or two flunkees. That's not because I curve it to be that way. My grading procedures are very clearly laid out during the first week of the semester, and they just happen to be tough. I think if you're a teacher and want to eliminate grade padding, just do it. Be the "mean teacher" for a while. All my classes still fill up, and none of my students has ever taken me to the administration over a grade dispute. They can't - my standards are there in black and white, so there's nothing to dispute.

By the way - the 40-person class I was referring to with almost no A's was music appreciation. :)


19 posted on 05/16/2004 6:43:56 PM PDT by saxprofhope
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