Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


1 posted on 10/23/2001 3:00:04 AM PDT by grimalkin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies ]


To: grimalkin
For the first time, professors at Harvard University have been asked to justify the grades they give students as the university launches its toughest examination yet of grade inflation.

"Well,she was blond,5'5',105 lbs,wore short skirts and kept crossing and uncrossing her legs. That's an "A" In my book."

2 posted on 10/23/2001 3:16:57 AM PDT by mdittmar
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
Ha ha haaaa. Poor saps, it's a runaway train. Pathetic.
3 posted on 10/23/2001 3:17:41 AM PDT by Havisham
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
BIG BUMP
4 posted on 10/23/2001 3:20:51 AM PDT by nopardons
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
I entered a state university in '76. I had the assistant dean for part of an intro engineering course. He was talking about grade inflation then, first time I ever heard the term "gentlemen's C". Last time too, come to think of it.
5 posted on 10/23/2001 3:25:16 AM PDT by Calvin Locke
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin; dighton
Three little words.
6 posted on 10/23/2001 3:33:45 AM PDT by Orual
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
When I went to colleges on the Left Coast, the opposite was the problem.
Harvard professors are in love with the students that parrot their left wing philosophies back at them. Any downgrading will probably be done at the expense of conservatives who can't lie as well.
Al Gore got honors because and only because he wrote a senior thesis paper on "the impact of television on the conduct of the presidency." During that time at Harvard, dove professors were grading easy to prevent their students from losing student deferments and being drafted. Maybe it became a tradition.
8 posted on 10/23/2001 3:56:13 AM PDT by patriciaruth
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
As someone in the recruitment business I laugh at Harvard grads with 'honors'. They are pathetic. I interviewed one who didn't know the capital of Germany. Get out of here Harvard--you've dumbed yourself down to a point that a degree from Harvard is a joke. And some of the courses that they take are outrageous. Most of them cannot write a decent memo.
10 posted on 10/23/2001 4:05:22 AM PDT by IceGirl2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
Duh - Must be time to begin the Self-Study at Harvard University in anticipation of their accreditation visit from the NEASC (New England Association of Schools and Colleges). Maybe the Visiting Team got wind of the recent Boston Sunday Globe article?

Faculty Senate must be happy ... get those Standards a'workin'. Thus spoke the Dean(s) ...

12 posted on 10/23/2001 4:44:13 AM PDT by jamaksin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
The Harvard grading system is the logical extension of national policies that confuse intelligence with merit.

This confusion is widespread, and not confined to Harvard.

What is the graduation rate of all United States medical schools? If you eliminate suicides, voluntary withdrawals, and involuntary incapacitations (prison, mental hospitalizations, and serious illness) it is close to 100%. That is to say, a letter of acceptance at an American medical school is equivalent to the MD degree.

This comes about because of grading and evaluation logic that says, "if this person was smart enough to get in here....".

The evaluation process for Harvard and other elite "educational" choices has become dangerously unbalanced in favor of raw intelligence, as opposed to genuine achievement. It is not an accident that Harvard has eliminated ROTC, which was (among other things) a program to locate and value achievement which is not measured primarily in psychometric terms.

The policy choice to replace the WASP aristocracy with an IQ aristocracy has had unpredictable consequences, the worst of which is to define "merit" in terms of intelligence.

So completely has the Harvard faculty (no dummies, themselves) accepted this syllogism that they cannot deny an "A" average to any of their little darlings, because, by their lights, they "deserve" it.

13 posted on 10/23/2001 4:59:45 AM PDT by Jim Noble
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
When my son was doing his doctorate at Harvard, he taught several sections of a difficult undergrad science course. He said most of the students were conscientious and did outstanding work. After all, they wouldn't even have gotten into Harvard if they had not been bright and studious. But my son recalled one young man who refused to come to class or to turn in any work. He didn't take the tests either. The professor in charge of the course instructed the grad students to give the slacker an "A" anyhow. The prof said that was the way things were done at Harvard.
17 posted on 10/23/2001 5:50:03 AM PDT by madprof98
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
Grades, grades, grades. Worry about grades. Oh my gawsh!

Harvard is supposed to get all the near maximum score SAT and ACT kids, right? (I mean, except for the celeb kids.) They SHOULD do well. If these kids DIDN'T do well, I'd be more suspicious of Harvard than if they did.

I thought the issue was learning the material, not imposing some arbitrary standard by which someone who has learned the material gets graded down. In my book, if a student masters material at a 93% level, then that person is keeping pretty phenomenal pace with what's happening in a class. (If this is the crap that Bill Gates had to put up with, I can see why he left...and formed one of history's most successful businesses.) There are idiotic questions that can be asked, of course, like "What's the 15th word on page 327 in the history text." That kind of foolishness certainly separates students based on something, but God doesn't even know what, and it has absolutely nothing to do with their mastery of subject matter.

Then there's the infamous "curve." You know what? If I gave you the smartest kids in the world, and you came back to me and told me that 40% did average or worse in learning the material, I'd be much more inclined to think that you're a crappy teacher who can't instruct the brightest minds out there, than that they have trouble learning. Them -- trouble learning -- that's insane. There's also integrity as an issue with the curve. If I have a class where everyone scored 93% or higher, and someone was giving "F's" to 93's and "C's" to 96's and "B's" to 98's, then I'd know for a fact that the grader was out of touch with some basic notions of ethics...fairness, balance.

Leave the profs alone. Leave the students alone. And for you prospective Ivy Leaguers out there....scratch Yale and Princeton off your list....sounds like Harvard not only has the best faculty, but also the most thoughtful and most human.

The administrators sound like they have poles up their ___, though.

19 posted on 10/23/2001 5:56:17 AM PDT by xzins
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
Where my husband teaches, professor's promotions and raises are almost entirely dependent on student evaluations. And students often evaluate on the basis of their anticipated grades.
20 posted on 10/23/2001 6:20:19 AM PDT by twigs
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
Even if I had the raw intelligence of these Harvard undergraduates (1450+ SAT, 135+ IQ) I would apply to Hillsdale and Grove City College instead. An undergraduate at these schools would have more contact with the faculty as opposed to teaching assistants. Also, even if a student were not as conservative as the average Freeper, the exchange of ideas of all viewpoints is freer at these schools than it is in the politically correct atmosphere of Harvard.

In short, Harvard is vastly over-rated except possibly for graduate school.

23 posted on 10/23/2001 7:24:15 AM PDT by GunsareOK
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
This explains a LOT of what we see in government...
24 posted on 10/23/2001 7:25:49 AM PDT by freefly
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: grimalkin
I taught for a semester at a University in Southern California. Had one young lady who crashed the class on the fist meeting, never showed up again, and was failed. Her dad was a dean from another school at the University and 'revised' the grade to an A. A buddy in the Registrar's office showed me the paperwork and then the 'review' on me by her dad stating in no uncertain terms I was never to be allowed to teach again. BTW the young lady went to law school and is now working for the Democrats.
28 posted on 10/23/2001 9:56:22 AM PDT by pikachu
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson