[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> The major problem with accepting everyone and then paring down the 
> classes each year based  on performance is that it ignores competence 
> and it ignores the fact that grades have unknown validity and 
> reliability. It may be the case that all the students are actually 
> within the same range of competence and the differences between them 
> are accounted for by error in using grades to stratify them.
If this were true generally (not just in "hyper-selected" medical 
schools and the like) then one would expect individual student's grade 
records to show a random distribution of grades, but they do not, 
broadly speaking. I expect (in a groups of typical undergraduates, where 
there is quite a lot of real variability) that an 85% promotion rate 
would more than capture those students who would falsely be excluded by 
a 50% cutoff (e.g., "misses"). (And if our grades our actually random, 
as you suggest, then we have much more serious problems than who we 
admit to university in the first place... not least of which is why I 
spend so much time on them when I could just as easily assign them by a 
random process, such as the proverbial tossing of assignments down the 
staris.)

But I think that Ken Steele may be right -- we are already cutting off 
around 15% each year, and it is not working very well. So perhaps the 
cutoff would have to be higher in order to have any visible effect.


Chris
-- 

Christopher D. Green
Department of Psychology
York University
Toronto, ON M3J 1P3
Canada

 

416-736-2100 ex. 66164
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.yorku.ca/christo/



"Part of respecting another person is taking the time to criticise his 
or her views." 

   - Melissa Lane, in a /Guardian/ obituary for philosopher Peter Lipton

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