Grade inflation a national trend
Hopkins professors, administrators hold alternate views on rising GPAs
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Dr. Adam Sheingate, director of Undergraduate Studies for the Political Science Department, felt that overall grades were higher for students today than in the past.
"I don't think it's any question that a C is not a median grade anymore and a B is probably the median grade today," he said. "Whether that's grade inflation is one question, and whether that's a problem is another question."
According to Paula Burger, dean of Undergraduate Education and Vice Provost, 26.7 percent of undergraduates from the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences earned Dean's List honors this past fall.
In 2002, the percentage of students receiving Dean's List was 22.3 percent. The criteria for receiving Dean's List is to have a 3.5 GPA or higher with a minimum of 14 credits total (at least 12 of which are graded).
Burger noted that the increase was not necessarily indicative of grade inflation.
"The number of students earning Dean's List has increased, but that is what one might expect, given the increase in the overall quality of entering students over that same period," she wrote in an e-mail to the News-Letter.
According to GPA data from the Greek Life Web site, the average undergraduate GPA over the past four years has been 3.23. The data did not show a significant fluctuation either upward or downward over the period.
The University does not have any grading standards that professors must follow. Instead, the administration allows individual departments to decide. Many of these departments leave it up to the professors.
"That is absolutely a matter of individual faculty discretion. That's about the last thing we would ever propose to tell faculty what to do," Paula Burger, dean of Undergraduate Education and vice provost, said.
According to Burger, Hopkins has not instituted any policies to set a fixed number of A grades.
"Some years ago when there were conversations nationally about grade inflation . . . I think Princeton faculty actually did decide that there were too many As being given out and they approved a policy where they told every department to restrict the number of As," she said.


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