A university is just a group of buildings gathered around a library. ~Shelby Foote

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Inflation

My last posts on "grade" inflation in sports and the presence of incredible stupid people in college had some interesting responses. On top of that, comes this email from an English professor here at UW-Parkside:

The Advancement of Learning

The institutional equivalent of grade inflation for students is nomenclature inflation. Our peer institutions, once state teachers colleges, then state colleges, are now state universities. On our own campus, we are so old that we can remember when there was only one vice chancellor and no provost, when there were no institutes or centers with directors and associate directors, when Communication was Speech and the Sports Activities Center only a Physical Education Building.

Reviewing our own program recently with the nearest available dean, we have had pointed out to us that we at the Institute of Institutional Prose are not keeping pace with the institution as a whole. We are therefore proud to announce our intention of changing our name to the Institute for Advanced Institutional Prose, a title which will suggest to all our similarity to the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton. As with similar changes, no actual change in function is anticipated. The change will become effective as soon as we have used up the high-grade stationary we ordered with our current title.

Which started me wondering-- where does it end? When everyone is getting As and Bs and a C is considered a poor grade, how do you evaluate who is actually doing well? Ceratinly it isn't hard to tell those that are doing poorly-- they're the ones with the B- or Cs-- how do you tell which of the As are real As and which would've been Bs in years past? Or does it even matter any more?

I was on a search and screen committee for a position here at UWP last year, and I can tell you that the transcripts of the candidates received barely a glance from me-- as long as the candidate wasn't getting Cs or worse and had taken the right sorts of courses, whether they had a 3.3, 3.5, or 3.8 did not matter to me because those scores no longer mean anything. So, is this a good thing or a bad thing?

The bad part of it is that the really good students get lumped together with the pretty good students. There is less reward for students to really excel-- you can get the same A for doing a good job that you can get for doing an outstanding job. This inflation of grades would seem to be leading to the lowering of expectations for our students-- which to me seems to be quite a serious problem.

On the flip side, there could be a certain freedom to grade inflation-- the focus is off of grades as the be all and end all of the process, since nearly everyone is assured of an A or B anyway, so both the teacher and the students can focus more on actual learning. I hope this is what is happening, that without the pressure of "acing" a class, that all of the students are absorbing lots and lots of knowledge. But that would seem to put a lot of faith in human nature to want to excel without any sort of benefit for doing so. How likely is that?

When currency inflates, and it inevitably does unless the issuing country is just in horrible economic shape, you eventually eliminate the smallest denomination (pennies are going to go away sooner or later folks-- they've already disappeared from tax forms) and, if necessary, add a higher denomination. Or print more of that higher denomination. The US could print more Benjamins, for example, and less Washingtons. Of course, with the advent of credit, the whole concept of hard currency is losing relevancy, but you guys get the analogy.

So, maybe we need a new grade? Can't really pick something that comes before A in the English alphabet, so maybe we need to borrow a letter from the Greeks? The new, best grade possible is the Alpha. Given only to the truly outstanding students.

What do you guys think?

Labels:

Comments:
I saw the grade inflation when I went for my MBA. You should have seen the riot that took place when one of the professors said in one class that most people would be Bs.
But grades are nothing once you get into the real world. (Not to disparage academia in any way.) I have never had a job interview where they asked for my grade point average, and I have never seen a job requirement that listed a necessary grade point average.
So since the private sector doesn't care (which is smart considering the inflation), it all comes back to the teachers. I think that one of the main factors in grade inflation is just to make their lives easier. If everyone is getting an A, then the obnoxious students that complain endlessly about grades don't have anything to complain about.
While I say this, it should be noted that I don't mind that teachers lives are easier, since I would never be able to handle that job.
 
...On the flip side, there could be a certain freedom to grade inflation-- the focus is off of grades as the be all and end all of the process, since nearly everyone is assured of an A or B anyway, so both the teacher and the students can focus more on actual learning. I hope this is what is happening, that without the pressure of "acing" a class, that all of the students are absorbing lots and lots of knowledge. But that would seem to put a lot of faith in human nature to want to excel without any sort of benefit for doing so. How likely is that?

I think this has been tried before. During my stint as a student at Texas A&M, I had a couple of professors who attended Pass or Fail schools. As a student at Texas A&M, I found it highly offensive that I had to work on the 4.0-based grade scale and these instructors of mine had coasted on a feeble standard of "Pass", which probably really meant "passed out in an alcoholic haze three times a week". Ok, I wasn't offended, I was envious.

I think the end result of grade inflation is lazy students. Blab on about 'learning' all you want. What's really going to happen is lots of more classed skipped, more booze consumed, more soap operas watched.

Then the kids with their freshly minted degrees will get out in the real world and won't cut it.
 
It's already happened to British 16-year-olds. They can get an "A*" grade in their GCSE's.

Someday the World Wide Wibble will sort it out. There'll be a little app that reads your resume/CV, extracts your grades and the year you got them, and it plots a bell curve for that year's results and your place on it. End of the fun and games, and good riddance.
 
Post a Comment

<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?