I recall that we discussed grade inflation on TIPS a while ago.  This
article appeared in today's Boston Globe.
Beth Benoit
Plymouth State University
New Hampshire

Harvard, other schools still fighting grade inflation
By Marcella Bombardieri <http://www.bostonglobe.com/staff/bombardieri> Save

Harvard College is facing a new round of disapproval, and even ridicule,
from some educators following news that the most common grade awarded is an
A, more than a decade after professors pledged to combat grade inflation.

Critics say that making top grades the norm cheapens the hard work of the
best students and reinforces the deluded self-regard of many members of the
millennial generation.

Yet Harvard has illustrious company among universities struggling with how
to turn the tide on several decades of rising marks.

Princeton University is reconsidering the grading crackdown it instituted
nine years ago, amid concerns that tougher grades are hurting Princeton
graduates’ prospects for jobs and graduate school. At Yale College, where
62 percent of grades are in the A range, proposals to curb grade inflation
are in doubt following student protests and faculty concern.

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Grade inflation is a problem far beyond the Ivy League, although perhaps
not quite as much of a problem, according to Arthur Levine, an education
scholar. For his book “Generation on a Tightrope,” Levine, president of the
Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, found in a national survey
that 41 percent of students had grade point averages of A-minus or higher
in 2009, compared to just 7 percent in 1969.

“Harvard is leading the nation once again,” Levine said Wednesday, with
considerable irony. “This is a generation which has grown up without
skinning their knees. They’ve all won awards: best trombone player born on
April 25. They’re used to having approbation.

“Given inflated self-esteem, it’s not a good thing to give them high
grades, because it only encourages a false sense of what they can and
cannot do,” he said.

After a Boston Globe analysis in 2001 found that an astonishing 91 percent
of Harvard College students were graduating with honors, officials released
data showing that 48.5 percent of grades were A’s and A-minuses, compared
to 33.2 percent who received those marks in 1985.

In response to the uproar that followed, the faculty capped honors — summa,
magna, and cum laude — at 60 percent. They also pledged to award more B’s,
a largely self-policing policy, but deans said they would notify department
chairman when professors were unusually lenient or stringent. For several
years, Harvard officials published annual grade statistics showing that
grades were creeping upward.

In response to a professor’s question at Tuesday’s meeting of the Faculty
of Arts and Sciences, Jay M. Harris, dean of undergraduate education, said
that the median grade awarded to undergraduates is an A-
minus, while the most frequently awarded grade is an A. The news was first
reported by The Harvard Crimson, the student newspaper.

Harvey C. Mansfield, a government professor who raised the issue, described
an “embarrassed silence” at the meeting, where neither President Drew Faust
nor the deans present commented on the issue. “Essentially, they’ve given
up on it,” said Mansfield, who has long railed against grade inflation.

Still, Mansfield said, he was cheered that he received e-mails from members
of the faculty council who suggested they may review the issue, asking him
to write a memo to put it on their agenda.

Harris did not respond to messages Wednesday, and Harvard spokesman Jeff
Neal would not comment beyond a statement saying that faculty members have
elevated the importance of teaching. “We watch and review trends in grading
across Harvard College, but we are most interested in helping our students
learn and learn well,” he said.

The Crimson editorialized Wednesday against any rigid grading policy,
suggesting that rising grades are “due in part to the rising quality of the
undergraduates themselves.”

Many professors are relatively sanguine about grade inflation. Harry Lewis,
former dean of Harvard College, wrote in his 2006 book, “Excellence without
a Soul,” that grades are meant to be a motivational device to help students
learn and should not be seen mainly as credentials for external consumption.

“The pressure for ‘meaningful’ and stiff grading is anti-educational,” he
wrote, noting that handwringing at Harvard about too many A’s dates to at
least 1894.

A few universities emphasize strict grading, or what students unhappily
call “grade deflation.” Boston University has been known for difficult
grading for many years.

In 2004, Princeton set guidelines to limit departments to awarding no more
than 35 percent of their grades in the A range.

But this fall, Princeton president Christopher L. Eisgruber asked a
committee to review the policy and whether it has “unintended impacts upon
the undergraduate academic experience.”

According to the student newspaper, the Daily Princetonian, Eisbruber
acknowledged that there is concern that the policy might be affecting the
percentage of admitted students who choose to enroll at Princeton.

Princeton economics professor Uwe E. Reinhardt said “good riddance” to
students who do not want to come to Princeton because it is harder to get
an A.

But he worries about whether Princeton graduates suffer when they apply to
graduate schools. Programs that use software to reject applications below a
certain GPA would put Princeton students at a disadvantage, he said.

Reinhardt said he was proud that Princeton has maintained grading
standards, while Harvard “has a lot of egg on its face.”

“Here we have a system of numbers by which important decisions about human
beings are made, about their future,” he said, “and those numbers are so
lousy that academics should blush over even publishing them.”

*Marcella Bombardieri can be reached at [email protected]
<[email protected]>. Follow her on Twitter @GlobeMarcella
<http://twitter.com/GlobeMarcella>.*

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