AP article on Grade Inflation

<p>Admissions Boards Face 'Grade Inflation'</p>

<p>Nov 18, 4:17 PM (ET)</p>

<p>By JUSTIN POPE</p>

<p>Josh Zalasky should be the kind of college applicant with little to worry about.</p>

<p>The high school senior is taking three Advanced Placement courses. Outside the classroom, he's involved in mock trial, two Jewish youth groups and has a job with a restaurant chain. He's a National Merit semifinalist and scored in the top 3 percent of all students who take the ACT.</p>

<p>But in the increasingly frenzied world of college admissions, even Zalasky is nervous about his prospects. He doubts he'll get in to the University of Wisconsin, a top choice. The reason: his grades.</p>

<p>It not that they're bad. It's that so many of his classmates' are so good. Zalasky's GPA is nearly an A minus, and yet he ranks only about in the middle of his senior class of 543 at Edina High School outside Minneapolis.</p>

<p>That means he will have to find other ways to stand out.</p>

<p>"It's extremely difficult," he said. "I spent all summer writing my essay. We even hired a private tutor to make sure that essay was the best it can be. But even with that, it's like I'm just kind of leveling the playing field." Last year, he even considered transferring out of his highly competitive public school, to some place where his grades would look better.</p>

<p>Some call the phenomenon that Zalasky's fighting "grade inflation" - implying the boost is undeserved. Others say students are truly earning their better marks. Regardless, it's a trend that's been building for years and may only be accelerating: Many students are getting very good grades. So many, in fact, it is getting harder and harder for colleges to use grades as a measuring stick for applicants.</p>

<p>Extra credit for AP courses, parental lobbying and genuine hard work by the most competitive students have combined to shatter any semblance of a Bell curve, one in which 'A's are reserved only for the very best. For example, of the 47,317 applications the University of California, Los Angeles, received for this fall's freshman class, nearly 21,000 had GPAs of 4.0 or above.</p>

<p>That's also making it harder for the most selective colleges - who often call grades the single most-important factor in admissions - to join in a growing movement to lessen the influence of standardized tests.</p>

<p>"We're seeing 30, 40 valedictorians at a high school because they don't want to create these distinctions between students," said Jess Lord, dean of admission and financial aid at Haverford College in Pennsylvania. "If we don't have enough information, there's a chance we'll become more heavily reliant on test scores, and that's a real negative to me."</p>

<p>Standardized tests have endured a heap of bad publicity lately, with the SAT raising anger about its expanded length and recent scoring problems. A number of schools have stopped requiring tests scores, to much fanfare.</p>

<p>But lost in the developments is the fact that none of the most selective colleges have dropped the tests. In fact, a national survey shows overall reliance on test scores is higher in admissions than it was a decade ago.</p>

<p>"It's the only thing we have to evaluate students that will help us how they compare to each other," said Lee Stetson, dean of admissions at the University of Pennsylvania.</p>

<p>Grade inflation is hard to measure, and experts caution numbers are often misleading because standards and scales vary so widely. Different practices of "weighting" GPAs for AP work also play havoc. Still, the trend seems to be showing itself in a variety of ways.</p>

<p>High school GPAs increased from 2.68 to 2.94 between 1990 and 2000, according to a federal study. Almost 23 percent of college freshmen in 2005 reported their average grade in high school was an A or better, according to a national survey by UCLA's Higher Education Research Institute. In 1975, the percentage was about half that.</p>

<p>GPAs reported by students on surveys when they take the SAT and ACT exams have also risen - and faster than their scores on those tests. That suggests their classroom grades aren't rising just because students are getting smarter.</p>

<p>Not surprisingly, the test-owners say grade inflation shows why testing should be kept: It gives all students an equal chance to shine.</p>

<p>The problems associated with grade inflation aren't limited to elite college applicants.</p>

<p>More than 70 percent of schools and districts analyzed by an education audit company called SchoolMatch had average GPAs significantly higher than they should have been based on their standardized tests scores - including the school systems in Chicago, Pittsburgh, Denver, San Bernardino, Calif., and Columbus, Ohio. That raises concerns about students graduating from those schools unprepared for college.</p>

<p>"They get mixed in with students from more rigorous schools and they just get blown away," said SchoolMatch CEO William Bainbridge.</p>

<p>In Georgia, high school grades rose after the state began awarding HOPE scholarships to students with a 3.0 high school GPA. But the scholarship requires students to keep a 3.0 GPA in college, too, and more than half who received the HOPE in the fall of 1998 and entered the University of Georgia system lost eligibility before earning 30 credits. Next year, Georgia is taking a range of steps to tighten eligibility, including calculating GPA itself rather than relying on schools, and no longer giving extra GPA weight to vaguely labeled "honors" classes.</p>

<p>Among those who work with students gunning for the more selective colleges, opinions differ as to why there seem to be so many straight-A students.</p>

<p>"I think there are more pressures now than there used to be, because 20 or 30 years ago kids with a B plus average got into some of the best colleges in the country," said William Shain, dean of admissions and financial aid at Bowdoin College in Maine. "It didn't matter if you had a 3.9 instead of a 3.95. I don't know if it matters now either, but people are more likely to think it does."</p>

<p>Lord, the Haverford dean, sees grade inflation as the outcome of an irrational fear among students to show any slip up - in grades or discipline. In fact, colleges like his are often more interested in students who have overcome failure and challenge than robots who have never been anything less than perfect.</p>

<p>"There's a protection and encouragement of self-esteem that I don't agree with, but I think it's a lot of what's going on here," he said. "And the college admissions process feeds into that."</p>

<p>Back in Minnesota, Edina may join a growing number of schools that no longer officially rank students - a move that could help students like Zelasky, who says he was told by Wisconsin his class rank makes him a longshot.</p>

<p>"They feel they're being left behind or not getting into the schools that they're applying to because of a particular class rank," says Edina counselor Bill Hicks. "And there is some validity with respect to some certain schools that use certain formulas."</p>

<p>But the colleges most popular with Edina students already know how strong the school is: Students' median verbal and math SAT scores are 1170 out of 1600.</p>

<p>Hicks isn't willing to blame the concentration of grades at the top on spineless teachers, or on grade-grubbing by parents and students. Expectations are high, and grades are based on student mastery of the material, not a curve. Wherever teachers place the bar for an A, the students clear it.</p>

<p>"Everyone here is, like, 'if I can get an 98 why would I get a 93?'" said Lavanya Srinivasan, who was ranked third in her Edina class last year. Far from being pushovers, she says, Edina teachers are tougher than those in a course she took at Harvard last summer.</p>

<p>Zalasky agrees the students work hard for their high grades.</p>

<p>"The mentality of this school is, if you're not getting straight A's you're not doing well," he said. "There's just so much pressure on us day in and day out to get straight A's that everybody does."</p>

<p>Hicks compares the atmosphere at Edina to the World Series expectations that always surround the superstar lineup of the New York Yankees.</p>

<p>"If they don't win it," he said, "then it's failure."</p>

<p>Great article. Shows all sides of the problem. </p>

<p>There's definitely more competition than 20 years ago. I think students are learning and doing more (thanks to word processing and the internet). Do they deserve their A's? That's hard to say.</p>

<p>I hate the reliance on SATs, especially given the College Board's virtual monopoly and the way they take advantage of that (high fees, poor quality control on scoringe, etc). But I can see how the colleges are having trouble reading transcripts. </p>

<p>I don't think eliminating ranks is the answer. If you have a 3.9 GPA and are ranked 1/4 of the way down your class, that would show grade inflation at your school. My son has an UNweighted 3.5 at our public hs, and he's in the top 10%. I'd say that puts our grades in the "realistic" range.</p>

<p>30 years ago I had as many As as Bs and got into Harvard. I was probably one of the top 5 girls in a class of 80 (our school didn't rank). I don't think too many kids could get away with that today, but perhaps with grade inflation I'd have been a straight A student? I don't know.</p>

<p>Hmmm, I just had a thought. My son's grades are SLIGHTLY lower than mine were, but his SATs are slightly higher. So maybe MY grades were inflated? </p>

<p>On the other hand, in my day, my hs had ONE section of honors for each subject. For example, of 350 kids in my class, no more than 15 - 20 could take Freshman Honors English. My son's class also has 350, but according to his school's recent accredidation report, about 1/3 of them take honors classes. So maybe it's not the grades that are inflated, but the "honors" designation?</p>

<p>Lafalum: Don't forget that the SAT has been "recentered," so it's not a one-to-one comparison of your scores to his.</p>

<p>I've heard that before - how exactly were they "recentered"??? It sure seems like SAT scores are so much higher than they were when I went to college.</p>

<p>The thing I dont understand is how a person who does so good on standardized tests(ACT, PSAT, AP's) manages to do so poorly in the classroom so as to rank near the middle of his hs class. Grade inflation does not explain this at all because grade inflation should work in Mr Zalinsky's favor too. If he is a NMS semifinalist and scored in the top 3% in the ACT, he should have little problem managing to be in the top 10% of his class. This would more than explain the likelihood that he is a good test taker.</p>

<p>I do not disagree that grade inflation is a problem but it should not lead to the disparities of class rank indicated in the article.</p>

<p>The problem with class ranks is that high schools rank differently. Some make no distinction between honors, regular, and AP when ranking, so all the valedictorians could have 4.0s in regular classes, and students in all APs could have a B here or there, lowering their rank, but making them much smarter than the 20 or so vals. There are schools like mine that do not distinguish between honors and AP. Honors is generally a joke and AP is semi hard (just my opinion, I have classmates who disagree) so the vals could have taken honors classes and not AP classes (though it does not seem to affectthe vals at my school as they truly are the strongest students). The issue I have with my school is that my schedual has more rigor than some kids, but because I had a slip up or two sophmore year, I am barely in the top 5%, while other students with easier classes have 4.0s and ranked higher than me. This is why the SATs and ACTs mean so much. They may be the only way to guage how smart students are with all this grade inflation. AP/IB scores would help to, but not all highschools offer them, so that would be unfair to some applicants.</p>

<p>As a side note, why is this kid worrying about Wisconsin admissions. It is a cakewalk. The averages are 4.0 wGPA (our val is about a 4.9 and top 5% is like 4.7) and 1300/1900 SAT from my high school (we are OOS). If he is a NMSF and has a top ACT score, he should get in. Paying for a person to help him write his essays when Wisconsin is a state school that probably does not put a whole lot of weight into essays, and more into grades and test scores was probably a waste of money.</p>

<p>
[quote]
More than 70 percent of schools and districts analyzed by an education audit company called SchoolMatch had average GPAs significantly higher than they should have been based on their standardized tests scores.... That raises concerns about students graduating from those schools unprepared for college.

[/quote]
I admit that I harbored this fear for my daughter.... among the top 4% in her high school class, but how would a kid with a 1200 SAT, graduating from a high school where the average SAT score is around 1080, cope when she somehow managed to end up studying on an Ivy league campus? </p>

<p>Well, the answer is (1) she is challenged like she has never been challenged before; (2) she is working harder than ever and seems to be doing extremely well. She plunged right in, taking advantage of AP credit to sign up for advanced classes -- then was upset with what she saw as a poor grade (a C) on an early exam. I gave her a pep talk ("honey, in college B's & C's are like A's & B's in high school") and she turned things around with a perfect essay score on the next exam. </p>

<p>I know that research shows that high school grades are a better predictor of college success than test scores, and I think that may simply be because of internal motivation of the students. It may be that students who place importance on grades are willing to work as hard as they have to in whatever environment they end up in. In fact, a significant discrepency in test scores, with the student scoring much better than the norm for the high school, could undermine the inference that the grades represent a certain amount of effort. And effort may be what is needed to perform well at a competitive college, no matter what the test scores. </p>

<p>So I don't know what SchoolMatch does, but I think those test scores need to be looked at in context with the school. Since my daughter's scores were above the norm for her school, her GPA is not a mismatch... even if the school itself is significantly weaker than the northeastern prep schools attended by many of her college classmates. Yes, there was a sort of academic culture shock.... but it wasn't entirely unexpected and it didn't take very long for my daughter to adjust to the higher demands. </p>

<p>I do think that SAT Subject Tests and APs are probably more important for demonstrating whether a student is prepared for college than the SAT I, simply because they are objectively graded and show mastery of specific subject areas.</p>

<p>originaloog, my son was a NM finalist & high scorer who was not in the top 10% of his high school class, though he was close (rank was 11th percent, rather frustrating at the time). Partly this was because his high school did not use weighted grades for ranking and included nonacademic courses as well; my son had C's in P.E., and a couple of B's in 9th grade and in an algebra course taken in 8th grade. He had straight A's in his AP & honors classes, so his weighted academic GPA looked a lot better than the GPA used to figure rank.</p>

<p>However, I agree with you that a big discrepency between test score and rank can indicate that a kid is something of a slacker. That's why I think the colleges ought to look at the whole picture -- it is easy enough to recalculate a GPA. I think any kid with a 4.0, or close to that, in all the the college prep track academic subjects should be evaluated as if they are in the top 10%, regardless of how the high school calculates class rank. If the kid has high scores on AP exams or SAT Subject tests that match (or exceed) the grades in the corresponding high school courses, that acts as an additional validator.</p>

<p>With respect to Edina High School, it is in a predominantly white upper middle class suburb of Minneapolis, and academically it is probably one of the highest rated schools in Minnesota. It was the highest ranking high school from Minnesota on Newsweeks' Top High Schools list earlier this year (I believe we had only 3 schools on that list out of 1000) which I believe means that there is a high ratio of AP/IB classes per student, so taking only 3 AP classes as this student was is probably well below the rigor of most students at this school who are taking a full load of AP/IB classes. Also the Univ of Wisconsin is one of the top schools that high school students from the Twin Cities area apply to (MN students receive reciprocity and pay MN tuition rates in Wisc).</p>

<p>
[quote]
The thing I dont understand is how a person who does so good on standardized tests(ACT, PSAT, AP's) manages to do so poorly in the classroom so as to rank near the middle of his hs class. Grade inflation does not explain this at all because grade inflation should work in Mr Zalinsky's favor too. If he is a NMS semifinalist and scored in the top 3% in the ACT, he should have little problem managing to be in the top 10% of his class.

[/quote]
One explanation I see is that a minute difference may separate the kids in the top 10 percent from the top 50 percent precisely because grade inflation has distributed more GPAs in the 3.5-4.0 range. If his GPA is "nearly an A-minus" (which I took to mean a high B-plus), that's about a 3.4 or 3.5 (I think?). If 250 students have higher GPAs than that, it sounds as if performance on one test or paper, or maybe even a quiz or homework assignment, may determine where a student ranks. Should that be the standard colleges apply to evaluate students?</p>

<p>I'm not usually a supporter of weighting grades because of the way students and parents then manipulate hs schedules for the maximum point value. Our school doesn't weight, but I've seen a lot of ugliness reported in the press on the issue. However, it sure could have helped this kid out.</p>

<p>My son is the kind of kid who scores very high on SAT and AP exams with essentially no studying or review and is exceptional in his pursuit of several intellectual interests (has won or placed very high in a couple of national competitions), but has less than stellar grades. He is very much into learning for learning's sake and very minimally into complying with teachers' requirements for achieving As. He has had many instances in which his grades have been negatively affected by things like having the creativity shown in making a poster to accompany a book report be weighted equally with the level of critical analysis and quality of writing in the book report (he's great with the latter, but not with the former). He's generally a polite, respectful kid, but is a non-conformist in many areas of his life. It will be interesting to see what colleges make of all this when admissions season rolls around next year.</p>

<p>Map
He sounds very much like a boy, with female teachers asking for creative posters. There was a long thread earlier on about these projects, and many of us felt they should be stopped by HS.
Good luck to your S. Whats on his college list?</p>

<p>map</p>

<p>My son is much like yours and I'm quite confident he'll do well with the quirky, intellectual, small LACs he's choosing to apply to. (Just completed app #3, only 7 supplements to go...Yay!)</p>

<p>He's had 2 B pluses in freshman year, GPA is 3.98, school doesn't weight, so he's ranked 15 or 16, but he's NMS, has a few deep ECs he loves, has researched the schools to find good matches (though I've helped logistically) and is crafting essays and short answers that really let his voice shine through. I could be wrong to be confident and I have moments of anxiety, but I think the schools he's chosen will be interested in the person he is, not his class rank. Hope I'm right.</p>

<p>Oh, and his posters and projects are usually a mess too. When he wraps a gift, it looks like he's vandalized it.</p>

<p>Hard to find that SAT recentered table these days - it's on page 3 of this: <a href="http://www.collegeboard.com/research/pdf/rs05_3962.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.collegeboard.com/research/pdf/rs05_3962.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>My verbal score would be higher now, my math the same, giving me scores almost identical with my son's. He's had a lot more APs than I did, but I was a year and a half younger as a senior - so I figure we are about quits!</p>

<p>Hard to find that SAT recentered table these days - it's on page 3 of this: <a href="http://www.collegeboard.com/research/pdf/rs05_3962.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.collegeboard.com/research/pdf/rs05_3962.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>My verbal score would be higher now, my math the same, giving me scores almost identical with my son's. He's had a lot more APs than I did, but I was a year and a half younger as a senior - so I figure we are about quits!</p>

<p>
[quote]
He sounds very much like a boy, with female teachers asking for creative posters.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Spanish II. "Language Week Festival." The students had to make t-shirts with a Spanish language statement on it and artwork representing something from Latin America. This represented TWENTY PERCENT of the grade in the class. My son forgot to bring (<em>sigh</em>) a plain, white t-shirt into school on the correct day -- automatic 50% deduction for "late work." He included an English word in his Spanish phrase -- an automatic zero for the work (he didn't notice the ban in the handout -- <em>sigh</em>). His phrase was making some sort of joke about using English mixed with Spanish and his English word was an intentionally wry comment. The Spanish teacher was quite frankly too stupid to understand the humor. He got a big, fat zero for a t-shirt project that represented 20% of the semester grade in a foreign language course. His final grade was a C+, which means an "A" if he had passed "t-shirt."</p>

<p>I can't even begin to express my feelings about the incredible mis-application of the grading process by teachers who ought to be scraping mud out of fenders at a carwash instead of dealing with impressionable utes.</p>

<p>And, yeah, I also think arts and crafts projects have no place in school past the sixth grade -- except in art classes, of course.</p>

<p>As some folks disagreed with my first post here, I guess the reason is the grading policies of our suburban public high school. I went back and looked at my son's gpa, converting the %age grades to letter grades using 91%+ as an A. For academic subjects only and weighting +1/+.5 for AP/Honors classes, he had a weighted gpa of 3.763 and an unweighted gpa of 3.316. However these gpa placed him in the top 5% of his class. And interestingly his gpa after 4 semesters at Rensselar is almost exactly the same as his weighted hs gpa of 3.763, clocking in at 3.765. He was also NMS Commended and had a 1450 SAT score in a single sitting, having taken it twice, once Jan jr yr(1410?) and once Oct sr yr.</p>

<p>I guess there is no grade inflation at our public hs. Interestingly, these uninflated gpa's do not seem to hinder our students in college admissions, probably because our district has a very detailed hs report explaining district grading policies.</p>