从2027年开始,在哈佛大学拿“A”将变得更加困难
Getting An 'A' At Harvard Will Be Tougher Starting In 2027

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/getting-harvard-will-be-tougher-starting-2027

为了应对日益严重的成绩通胀问题,哈佛大学教职员近期投票决定,将本科课程中A级成绩的比例限制在20%以内。这项措施得到了近700名参与投票教授中约70%的支持,计划于2027年秋季正式生效。 此前的一份委员会报告显示,哈佛大学本科生的成绩中有60%为A,比过去二十年增加了35%。包括史蒂芬·平克(Steven Pinker)教授在内的支持者认为,此举将重塑学术严谨性,并确保A级成绩真正代表“卓越的成就”。此外,教职员还批准使用平均百分位排名而非平均绩点(GPA)来评定内部荣誉。 尽管这些改革旨在提高学术诚信,但已遭到学生群体的强烈抵制。一些批评者对新评分系统的公平性及其潜在影响表示担忧。随着耶鲁大学和哥伦比亚大学等其他高校也面临类似的审视,预计哈佛大学的这一决定将对精英高等教育界关于评分标准的广泛讨论产生影响。

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原文

Authored by Micaiah Bilger via The College Fix,

Two thirds of faculty vote to approve cap on A grades for undergrads...

Harvard University faculty gave an emphatic “yes” to capping A grades in a vote Wednesday amid concerns about grade inflation and academic rigor at the prestigious institution.

Approximately 70 percent voted to approve the 20-percent cap on As in undergraduate courses, The Crimson, Harvard’s student newspaper, reports. Nearly 700 professors participated in the vote. The measure will go into effect in the fall of 2027.

Harvard psychology Professor Steven Pinker praised the decision in an X post Wednesday, calling it “a big step in combatting the grade inflation that has been dumbing down our courses, conveying the wrong message to students, and making universities a national laughingstock.”

Another professor, political scientist Max Abrams at Northeastern University noted the impact of the decision on other higher education institutions. 

Other scholars called for their Ivy League institutions to follow Harvard’s lead.

Along with limiting As, the faculty also approved a measure by a large majority “to use average percentile rankings, rather than GPA, to determine internal awards and honors,” according to The Crimson.

A third measure within the proposal did not pass. It would have allowed professors “to petition to opt out of the A cap” if the grading for their course is on an “unsatisfactory, satisfactory, and satisfactory-plus basis,” the report states:

When the proposal was first introduced in February, its architects pitched the A cap and percentile-ranking system as paired reforms: the ranking system would prevent students from avoiding larger or more difficult courses in search of better grades under the cap.

After pushback, the subcommittee separated the measures into distinct votes, delayed implementation by a year to fall 2027, and added a “satisfactory-plus” designation for courses that chose to opt out of the system.

In the weeks before the vote, some faculty also pushed for a more complicated alternative to the“20 percent plus four” formula that would have tightened limits in smaller courses. But that amendment failed to make it onto the final ballot after faculty favored the original formula in a preliminary poll.

All three proposals came from a Harvard faculty committee in response to a report that found 60 percent of all undergraduate grades are now As – a 35 percent increase compared to 20 years ago.

In a statement after the vote Wednesday, the committee said the change will help restore integrity to the institution.

“This matters for our students above all,” they stated. “A Harvard A grade will now tell them, as well as employers and graduate schools, something real about what a student has achieved. An A will once again be what Harvard’s guidelines have long said it is: a mark of extraordinary distinction.”

Despite widespread concerns about grade inflation, Harvard students overwhelmingly opposed the cap, American Council of Trustees and Alumni fellow Steve McGuire pointed out on X. 

One petition launched by a freshman claimed that the grading reforms would be “racially harmful,” The College Fix reported in April.

Concerns about grade inflation have arisen at other institutions as well, including Yale and Columbia universities and Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. Additionally, some professors say they are under pressure not to fail students.

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