Direct link to table: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GAQ2nQUW0AAqPI6?format=jpg&name=...
Direct link to tweet: https://twitter.com/sfmcguire79/status/1730568207700771279
Grade inflation has gotten kind of absurd.
But then again, who wants to pay tens of thousands of dollars for a degree and a transcript that says you're bad. So I kind of get it.
When I was at Berkeley, the mean GPA was B- (around 2.7). It's unexpected to see 3.7 as the mean GPA in other universities. That's a whole grade point higher.
What would be some good data sources to find out this dataset for other US universities?
Weird to call out gender studies as the leader, when 1) it’s not; 2) it’s specifically in a category of low enrollments, thus larger error; and 3) even the “hardest” field gives over 50% A’s.
Also weird to call this single recent snapshot as evidence of anything related to the trend without any historical data. They have 10 years of historic GPAs which show inflation, but grade inflation was a regular complaint I heard about Ivy schools in the 1990s. How do we know which disciplines are responsible for the rising GPAs? Anyway, given the low enrollment, it actually can’t be gender studies behind the overall inflation.
I am so happy princeton got rid of grade deflation lol. All this grades stuff is bullshit anyways.
I'm not really sure what the point is here, especially when +/- 500 enrolled is the only separator (actual enrollment, professor, section and scheduling are just a few other factors that I imagine would affect final grade).
Nonetheless, it makes sense that less objective learning is graded on level of effort and exploration, instead of correctness. And that effort would be more inherent in students seeking out niche courses where they want to...wait for it... explore something fuzzy and interesting.
Of course there are students looking to mail it in, but in my experience those students are looking for the lazy professors and charitable TAs for the courses that fulfill the foundational degree requirements outside of their major (this is just as true for Eng students who need a writing credit, for example, as it is for English majors who need a quant credit).
Most interestingly, if a gender studies course was graded more objectively, I'm guessing there would be push back for excluding any opinions outside of the defined parameters of success. It's a lose-lose situation that devalues gender studies but I feel that's for the customers (students, alumni, major donors) to decide.
This is missing a possible explanation: Anyone who’s not getting an “A” in Gender Studies drops it.
I don’t know if this is true generally but it was the only class I personally ever dropped in college because the workload was too high. Huge final paper with a lot of required references. I didn’t need it to graduate so it wasn’t worth finishing.
> grade inflation at Yale is driven by the humanities and “studies” programs — with gender studies leading the way
Now there is a shocker. Half the grade comes from showing you're woke, where merely having enrolled is considered an attestation.
I can think of three reasons why some fields might have higher grades than others:
1. The field is easier/has a lower "skill cap" (some business degrees might fit in here)
2.The people in the field are nice/particularly concerned with giving students positive feedback (based on stereotypes you'd expect this applies to women's studies)
3. The field isn't very prestigious and/or has low earning potential, so students don't go into the field unless they're very dedicated, so everyone in the classes works hard and performs at a high level (I could see this applying to pretty much everything on there above 75% As)
Whoa! In my undergraduate computer science program at a top US public university, each course was graded to a curve that determined the number of grades in each range. If memory serves, 27% of the class received A or A-. I knew grade inflation at private schools was real, but am still surprised to see 70% of Yale kids getting As in CS. At that point, they might as well just assign pass / fail grades.
I wish there was more data and more context.
E.g. we see data from one university – what about the others? Perhaps this grade inflation brings the grade distribution to the levels observed at other places. Or perhaps other universities are going through similar changes and Yale is no exception.
Also, the peak and a major spike happened at 2020-2021; are the pandemic, remote courses, or changes in teaching styles a factor?
Etc.
Every @#$& dean who ever sympathetically listened to some whiner who was in a protected class whine about something silly is responsible.
Silly whining mush be ridicules, but that leads to accusations under the Civil Rights Act, and some deans are cowards.
Source: I teach college, but mot at Yale.
Do college grades even matter at all? I mean maybe for your very first job or for grad school applications, but in both cases they're still going to be a minor factor unless the grades are awful.
It's funny to compare attitudes towards curve grading and stack ranking. If only 16% of a class is good enough for an A, shouldn't only 16% of employees be good enough for a raise?
If that's the indicator, does that list mean that Psychology and Philosophy are more seriously managed than... Computer science? Hmmm?
Forced curve. Until that happens grades are meaningless.
tl;dr: it’s a real problem; it’s also one we can transcend and grades themselves and accompanying resentment are the biggest problems ime
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If you find this upsetting, I would recommend taking a moment to consider how cruel grades can be. Yes, celebrating excellence is a lovely thing. But until college, one’s life is not fully self-determined. Many bright and gifted individuals do not experience the love and gift of learning and developing the intellect; but come to be oppressed by it; feeling they must put up with it just to get to the next stage when they may finally find freedom — my current working definition of authentic ‘freedom’ being ‘loving what one is doing, being loved by others for it, and having ones needs met lovingly’.
At Yale, a rare few have this kind of ‘freedom’ already — they love what they’re studying, excel at it, and have peers, mentors, or lecturers that enjoy them. And they get great grades; sometimes they are valedictorian and they compose some of Phi Beta Kappa.
On the other end of the spectrum, there are those with exceptional potential; yet were not offered freedom — namely, they were asked to learn and engage in things from mean or unfair parents, teachers, and peers. One can find themselves stuck in this realm without escape, in part on account of the lack self-determination one has before they leave the home.
Achieving this level of freedom, once one realizes they don’t possess it — which itself can be a difficult journey; let alone then doing what it takes to free oneself — to engage in life primarily with love for what one is doing, to be loved by others for what one is doing, and have all of one’s needs met is yet a more demanding, yet tenable journey; but is very personal and there may be no guides, though there are helpers (eg for some, those who ask questions like “what brings you alive and those around you alive?” or “how can you do what others love of you in a way that you, too, love?” — and encouraging you to not give up on attempting the search for an answer for oneself and to encourage you to take care of yourself so you have the time and space and enough love to continue on the journey, its attended contemplations and experiments).
Anger at grade inflation, though, strikes me as like begrudging a prisoner that was next to you in a chain gang; being angry and upset with them — which is reasonable to a degree if they take their freedom and don’t live ‘freely’ (ie seeking to oppress others for their benefit — which except for the rare sociopath is wildly unpleasant, as attractive as the money or other benefits it comes with can look; which is not to say money is bad). As opposed to directing one’s resentment to those who are binding them; and then finding a way to transcend all that bullshit and to truly be free.
Why on earth would this be remotely noteworthy to Tyler Cowen, an economist? Set aside the cultural stuff -- it's obviously just market dynamics at its core. Humanities degrees are -- rightly or wrongly -- not considered to benefit one's future livelihood, so a priori, they are not seen as being as valuable as others in a financial sense, which drives down enrollments in humanities classes. When enrollments go down, it becomes more difficult to make the case to resource-constrained universities that the department deserves the funding used to recruit and retain faculty and graduate students, etc. (It's already a hard case given that humanities departments are less likely to bring in lucrative outside grants than STEM departments.) So, the faculty sing a song, they do a dance -- that is, they make the class as fun and entertaining as possible -- and they give everyone A's afterward. Word gets out (sometimes in a very structured way, via student social network groups), and students enroll (sometimes whole sports teams will swarm a single humanities class). The classes don't get cancelled, and more sections are created, which creates jobs for the grad students as TAs. Some professors are extra eager to inflate grades, because they like the attention and/or they want a following, which boosts their prestige (merit being more subjective in the humanities than STEM, too), and who knows, maybe one day they'll get a book deal or an NPR interview because they taught a famously big class. Some professors don't really want to do it, but the department chair really needs to keep that enrollment up so the provost doesn't axe the whole department in next year's budget, and the grad students have to eat, and what they study is important, so they bear up and do it anyway, and just feel guilty afterward.
It's a real phenomenon, and not good, but c'mon -- let's not pretend to be so shocked.
(EDIT: And the students will be extra disappointed if they don't get that A that was all but advertised to them, so it's all the harder to ever right the ship. And at prestigious institutions, there's always that facile argument that "If you're smart enough to get into this school, of course you're going to be smart enough to get A's at this school!" And all universities want to keep their future alumni donors happy...)
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What a load of BS.
So-called 'standards' are socially constructed by a euro-centric phallo-centric white-supremacist colonialist patriarchal dialect, and they are constructed specifically to otherize the marginalized, the non-cisgendered, and all the BIPOCs except asians.
I saw this earlier via Paul Graham's Twitter, when I was foolishly venturing into the algorithmic feed. He'd gone with the same takeaway, specifically pointing out gender studies.
Bit of an odd choice given that it clearly shows History of Science and History of Medicine as slightly "worse" in this regard and with higher enrollment.
The tweet only breaks it into 2 buckets (<500 and >500 enrollment), but the the number of students enrolled in Econ, Biology (MCDB or MB&B at Yale), History and Computer Science is about 10-50x more than the ones towards the bottom like Gender Studies or History of Science. So technically, these subjects contribute the most to grade inflation/deflation at Yale