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Is College a Racket? New Study Links a Surge in Graduation With Greed and 'Grade Inflation'
Red State ^ | 11/21/2021 | Alex Parker

Posted on 11/21/2021 8:44:29 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Education has absolutely changed.

One component of conversion: the value of being educated.

Not many decades past, a high school diploma was considered academic achievement enough.

College was reserved for elites and those seeking special skills.

But these days, even secretaries have Bachelor’s degrees.

From the looks of things, we’re a more educated society.

But what if somewhere along the way, school became a suitable place for slackers?

Apropos of such a scenario, a research team comprised of folks from a scholastic trio — Brigham Young University, Stanford University, and Purdue University — found that contemporary graduation rates may be bolstered by (Trigger Warning) “grade inflation.”

Prior to 1990, college graduation rates — particularly among men — were declining.

But then numbers began to climb.

Per the study published by Education Next, college attendance and completion have “changed dramatically.”

[S]tudents who were slated to graduate high school in 2004 are 3.8 percentage points more likely to graduate college than students from the class of 1992. This trend is confirmed in federal data, the Census, and registrar data from 10 public universities.

And not only are we blessed with more graduates, but they’re making better grades.

Yet, something smells of fish:

What’s driving this growth? We look at student background and academic preparation, as well as institutional practices like support-service spending, and find that none of these potential factors explain the changes. But one trend is clear across all the datasets: Compared to decades past, college students have been earning better grades in recent years, and better college grades are strongly associated with higher rates of graduation.

Other factors that could explain the increase — high school prep and labor-force college participation rates — have evolved in such a way so as to predict fewer graduations, not more.

It might just be that pupils today are getting pampered.

In analyzing grades, exam scores, and graduate rates from 2001 to 2012 at one liberal arts school, the investigative team found indications of “more lax standards in grading.”

In two required science courses that gave the same tests over time, even as students’ grades were going up, their performance on nearly identical exams stayed about the same. Meanwhile, the school’s graduation rate grew to 85.9 percent from 83.1 percent during that time, and students’ grade-point averages increased to 3.02 from 2.77.

The study notes that grade inflation “raises important questions about the meaning of some college degrees.”

They ain’t just whistlin’ Dixie — these are the days of the Gender Studies major.

And while probing the relationship between constructs and crotches is fine if it scratches your itch, the real-world application is a bit of a head-scratcher.

But maybe actual use is no longer an applicable metric. The best I can tell, the entire concept of schooling’s been upended.

As we’re relentlessly informed, things once viewed as marks of achievement are just plain ol’ white supremacy.

Public institutions, therefore, are trying to undo more than a century of sin.

Hence, like a calligraphy-adorned certificate into toilet paper, education’s been repurposed.

Cases in point:

University President Sends a Letter Announcing the School’s Top Priority: Racial Justice and Equity

California University Eyes ‘Radical’ BIPOC Honors Program Based on Equity Instead of Grades

Professor Razes the Evil of Writing Rules, Whacks White Supremacy by Gonging Grades

In Order to Attack ‘Systemic Racism,’ a School Eliminates Failure and Time Constraints

You’ll Be Graded on Wokeness: Professor Forces Students to Put Their Pronouns on Assignments

Colorado University Hosts Teacher Training to Fight the ‘White Supremacy’ of ‘Productivity’

A bit more evidence of education’s emerging ease:

[S]tarting school a year later corresponds to a statistically significant increase of 0.025 grade points, and that this difference holds steady even when we control for students’ scores on end-of-course exams, the specific courses they take, and student characteristics including SAT test scores. …

[S]tudents with the exact same score on the exact same final exam earned better grades in later years. … [O]ur finding that grades are increasing over time…suggests that it’s getting easier to earn a degree at the public liberal arts college we study.

Might money be a motivator? Say it isn’t so:

The recent policy focus on college completion rates seems a likely contributor to increases in average GPAs. As schools and departments face increased scrutiny and…increased funding incentives, they may respond by increasing graduation rates. Changing standards of degree receipt is a low-cost way to increase graduation rates. … [G]raduation rates increased sharply at public four-year schools and community colleges, which rely on tax dollars and can be affected by states’ performance-based funding rules.

Therefore:

[T]here may be deleterious effects of grade inflation if it changes what is learned in college.

So could people now be more educated and yet dumber?

It doesn’t appear particularly impossible.

And consider this doozy of a data point:

[A]t least one third of all U.S. students don’t finish (secondary school)…

Providentially, Joe Biden has a solution: the College Completion Fund, which Builds Back Better to the tune of $6.2 billion a year.

But let’s complete the above quote from EducationNext.org; as it turns out, a bunch of those collegiate class-takers are just goofing off:

[A]t least one third of all U.S. students don’t, even six years after they enroll.

Maybe hold off on the six bil.

The study sums things thusly:

[W]ith growing uncertainty about the relative return on investment in terms of both time and tuition, both students and institutions should take a hard look at the ultimate value of their efforts.

That sounds right.

Even so, if you do enroll in school, with our new priority shift, you might make just the difference the whole world needs.

But in the event that you fall short, you’ll at least have acquired information that’ll last a lifetime:

University's '21-Day Antiracism Challenge' Schools Students on 'How White People Got Made'
https://t.co/uAg16nbIsm

— RedState (@RedState) September 6, 2021

When it comes to wokeness, universities get an A+ — no inflation needed.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Society
KEYWORDS: college; gradeinflation; graduation; racket
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1 posted on 11/21/2021 8:44:29 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

A small percentage of people know it’s a racket.


2 posted on 11/21/2021 8:47:14 PM PST by Osage Orange (1961 VW Two Door Truck)
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To: SeekAndFind

Yes, but in college, they spell it “racquet.”


3 posted on 11/21/2021 8:50:40 PM PST by Jess Kitting
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To: SeekAndFind

100% yes. Only for a small minority of student does it pay off. The rest need to learn a trade and get a job.


4 posted on 11/21/2021 9:05:58 PM PST by vpintheak (Live free, or die!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Read later.


5 posted on 11/21/2021 9:09:41 PM PST by NetAddicted ( Just looking)
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To: SeekAndFind

If school cost $10 thousand dollars a year, and after 4 years you have an art history degree, then you are in debt for $40 thousand dollars. Good luck paying that off with any job that you get with an art history degree.


6 posted on 11/21/2021 9:15:51 PM PST by political1 (Love your neighbors)
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To: SeekAndFind

Yeah, when Johnny gets a degree in English and his thesis is on “The Meaning of the Word Shit” or on “How to Climb a Tree,” then you know he is qualified for some high-paying job in the produce department of some grocery store. Johnny will say, “What a lucky bugger I am! I’m glad college got me this far. I was starting to have my doubts.”


7 posted on 11/21/2021 9:17:13 PM PST by BEJ
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To: SeekAndFind

Grades are inflated because tuition is so high. Professors give students a break on final grades, since everyone knows that students will need a lifetime to pay back the loans on a $200,000 degree. Sure, give them A’s and B’s and hope they get tough under the yoke of a huge loan. Very sad, really. The Apollo 11 involved three million parts, 400,000 workers in 50 states and an average age of 25. Few Apollo workers had college degrees, since there was a small group of designers hired from the best colleges like Cal, MIT and UCLA. Today, colleges are losing customers and demolishing dorms.


8 posted on 11/21/2021 10:00:00 PM PST by Falconspeed ("Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others." Robert Louis Stevenson.)
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To: SeekAndFind

My son is about to graduate with his associates in teaching. I had harder homework assignments in 6th grade. Glad I never wasted time in collage.


9 posted on 11/21/2021 10:33:41 PM PST by The MAGA-Deplorian (. Democrats are lawless because Republicans are ball-less!)
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To: SeekAndFind

College is a racket.


10 posted on 11/21/2021 10:37:25 PM PST by TrumpetteNJ
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To: TrumpetteNJ

Public colleges...just a collection device to scoop out state and federal money.
I would guess there are better smaller private colleges.


11 posted on 11/21/2021 10:43:12 PM PST by Getready (Wisdom is more valuable than gold and diamonds, and harder to find.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Is the pope a Marxist?


12 posted on 11/21/2021 10:52:45 PM PST by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you is how they control you. )
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To: SeekAndFind

College used to mean something, but like everything else Democrats touch it was perverted to their own ends. They do these things while we are all distracted (as by the Rittenhouse verdict currently), meanwhile they are busy covering up their past crimes. I read an article over at TheFederalist about that, “Whistleblower Videos Capture Pennsylvania Election Officials Destroying Evidence”, so give that a look. We need full forsenic audits of all 50 states so we can root out the election fraud for good. The truth is this started decades ago when communists infiltrated colleges, MSM, government schools and the Democrat Party.


13 posted on 11/21/2021 10:57:21 PM PST by ProfessorGoldiloxx
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To: vpintheak

I know Mike Rowe (from Dirty Jobs) has a program encouraging people to get into trades rather than go to college. A lot of those jobs pay very well, they just aren’t glamorous. Plus you don’t have college debt, so you can own a home much sooner in life.


14 posted on 11/21/2021 10:59:31 PM PST by ProfessorGoldiloxx
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To: political1

Ditto weddings. What used to be simple ceremonies has turned into a massive industry of wasted money. If couples used the same money they spend on a wedding to begin their life together (think down payment on a home) they’d be better off than blowing it on part of ONE day in their life.


15 posted on 11/21/2021 11:01:46 PM PST by ProfessorGoldiloxx
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To: ProfessorGoldiloxx

Yes..but since they are so stupid...it would be smart to start a wedding planner service to relieve them off their money. Let them believe that life is an endless stream of pleasurable events. Just get their money.


16 posted on 11/21/2021 11:35:36 PM PST by Getready (Wisdom is more valuable than gold and diamonds, and harder to find.)
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To: aquila48

Are you a turtle?


17 posted on 11/22/2021 12:13:31 AM PST by .44 Special (Taimid Buacharch)
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To: SeekAndFind

Went to college from the Fall of 1967 until the Spring of 1971 when the wages of a decent Summer time job would pay for one semester’s tuition. And everyone went home during breaks instead of vacation hot spots.

It was a different time.


18 posted on 11/22/2021 3:40:55 AM PST by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: ProfessorGoldiloxx

Exactly what I’m talking about. My son and daughter are both way better off than their peers. Both working decent jobs, 1 in the trades.
If they choose college later, they’ll have some savings and experience that young kids coming out of HS then college won’t have. Good on them.


19 posted on 11/22/2021 11:22:23 AM PST by vpintheak (Live free, or die!)
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To: ProfessorGoldiloxx

If you want to be a second class citizen go into the trades.


20 posted on 11/22/2021 11:26:56 AM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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