schools with grade inflation

<p>Hey what are some really good schools with grade inflation, or the most selective/ivy league schools that its the easiest to get a high college gpa at?</p>

<p>Just wondering, Brown U is the only one I've heard of.</p>

<p>obviously Harvard</p>

<p>National</a> Trends in Grade Inflation, American Colleges and Universities
Where</a> All Grades Are Above Average (washingtonpost.com)</p>

<p>most ivys .</p>

<p>all of the ivies. good to see that you're worried about the educational value of your degree as opposed to the career prospects!</p>

<p>Cornell and Princeton supposedly don't though....</p>

<p>i think pton has a 35% "A" cap, which honestly isn't bad at all. if they're going significantly under, that might be deflation, but if they reach the limit it's nothing to complain about.</p>

<p>Better yet what are the few schools w/o grade inflation, F & M, Bucknell, Cornell, Reed, some tutors at St John's College. Others w/o?</p>

<p>^ Chicago and Berkeley.</p>

<p>Most engineering programs lack grad inflation.</p>

<p>True that.</p>

<p>Ivies, save for Princeton and Cornell.</p>

<p>Columbia apparently ruins the fun of easy A classes by listing what % of that class got an A on the transcript.</p>

<p>Keep in mind that employers and grad schools aren't stupid and have adjusted their expectations of GPA on a per-school basis.</p>

<p>Cornell= grade deflation compared to most everywhere</p>

<p>I know Cornell is known for its academic rigor, but Princeton? I'd always heard it was as inflated as Harvard (in many senses of the word, haha).</p>

<p>Princeton started putting avg grade of the class next to the student's grade; maybe this has lowered grade inflation. At Harvard as a Teaching Fellow for Applied Intermed. Stats I could give a grade of A, A-, B+, anything lower and the prof had to read the paper. No wonder 90%+ of the College grad. w/ Honors. (I never gave anything lower than the B+, the new Gentleman's C.)</p>