Posted on 10/12/2001 5:58:42 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Harvard's wholesale honor roll © St. Petersburg Times, published October 12, 2001 (Full Text Below)
Harvard apparently has the most above-average students this side of Lake Woebegon. More than 90 percent of last year's senior class graduated with honors, maintaining at least a B average. We're more interested in what happened to the 9 percent who graduated without honors. Had they quit attending class three years earlier? Were they in jail? Or Yale?
Harvard selects its student body from among the top young scholars in the country, but so do many other top universities. At other Ivy League schools, the seniors graduating with honors ranged from 51 percent at Yale to 8 percent at Cornell. Only 20 percent of Stanford's seniors graduated with honors. The rate was 28 percent at Duke and 35 percent at Johns Hopkins. Did Harvard's seniors perform that much better than their peers? Or has grade inflation gotten even more out of hand at Harvard than at other top universities?
The most pernicious effect of grade inflation is the blurring of the lines between truly outstanding academic performance and merely satisfactory work. At many elite universities, failing a class is virtually impossible, and even the gentleman's C's that President Bush claims to have compiled at Yale have become endangered species.
Grades -- and honors -- should mean something. If nothing else, Harvard should consider copying the policy of its neighbor, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which doesn't award graduating honors, on the theory that an MIT diploma is distinction enough.
Bump!
Bump!
My daughter has always been a good student and will probably graduate with honors even though she took a couple of hits on her grades by refusing to read Al Gores book (Silent Spring?) in one of her classes and speaking out against a Professor who was lecturing some crap about the white male culture being responsbile for all the woes in the world.
The values of most of the student body at A&M is distinctly conservative, but not so for many of the Professors who teach there.
Gig 'em Ags!
Aggies have great parents but they need to learn about those LIBERALS lurking in the world. They can cut their teeth on those professors.
Congratulations to your daughther, and to you!
Aggie Mama Class of '93
This is because the elite universities no longer exist to educate students. Instead, it has evolved into a massive patronage scam for the children of elite society, particularly at the undergraduate level. Some of the stupidest people I have ever had to deal with in my life are people that graduated Harvard or Yale in the last 10-15 years. They went there because of who mommy or daddy knows, or bought, and their entire four years was one big party, after which they were handed a meaningless diploma, but a meaningless diploma that said "Harvard" or "Yale" on it, which for some sad reason is enough to impress many people. And it automatically identifies them as An Elite, which grants them carte blanche to the East Coast snob industry, particularly the New York media industry, where they are granted entrance immediately at age 22 and put on the career fast track, without the least regard to actual ability.
It is the world's biggest scam, and the faster the rest of the country figures that out and stops treating these people as gods, the better.
I was much heartened by George ("Bush...Texas...Cheeseburger") Bush's press conference last night. He easily and handily rolled over the hostiles in the audience.
P.S. Given that unmitigated arrogance is a prime and consistent indication of a liberal mind-set, where does that put Bill O'Reilly (FNC)? I never in my wildest dreams thought that I would ever cheer on Charlie Wrangle! Mercy!
Muster--[Excerpt] Still remembering and honoring the time spent in Aggieland, the tradition of mustering has grown in strength, meaning, and spirit. By 1929, meeting had grown worldwide, and in 1942 Aggie Muster gained international recognition. Twenty-five men, led by General George Moore '08, mustered during the Japanese Siege of the Philippine island of Corregidor. Knowing that Muster might soon be called for them, these Aggies embodied the essence of commitment, dedication, and friendship- the Aggie Spirit. They risked their lives to honor their beliefs and values. That small group of Aggies on an outpost during World War II inspired what has developed into one of our greatest traditions. [End Excerpt]
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