A burgeoning literature has documented the influence of adjunct instructors on student subsequent interest and success, but very little is known about the underlying mechanisms. This study investigates instructor choice of grading standards as one mediating channel by exploiting a unique university policy that converts full-time permanent lecturers from existing pool of part-time temporary instructors. We find that instructors hired on a temporary, part-time basis assign higher grades than their permanent full-time counterparts, with no discernible differences in student learning outcomes or perceived teaching effectiveness. The differential grading standards, however, appear to have a nonnegligible impact on student enrollment patterns
Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs) do not measure teaching effectiveness, and their widespread u...
Student assessment of courses and instructors can provide meaningful data about effective educationa...
The widespread use of student ratings of instruction prompts the important question, "Do differ...
A burgeoning literature has documented the influence of adjunct instructors on student subsequent in...
Based on a dataset on two- and four-year college students and instructors from an anonymous state th...
We develop a model that identifies a range of new and somewhat counterintuitive results about how th...
The present multiyear study sheds light on the effects of faculty status on student evaluations of t...
Graduate and undergraduate students were asked to rate hypothetical teachers in a full-factorial, fu...
In this article, I address the paradox that university grade point averages have increased for decad...
This paper studies the effect that part-time instruction has on students ’ final grades in the princ...
Understanding the relationship between grading practices and student evaluations is especially impor...
This article examines how a faculty member's status-'either tenured or tenure-track-'might affect th...
The widespread use of student evaluations to rate faculty has raised the question of whether high st...
Grade inflation has long been an issue in academia, and with this comes the concern that instructors...
An exploratory study was launched to redress a gap in the literature that is expressed as an assumpt...
Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs) do not measure teaching effectiveness, and their widespread u...
Student assessment of courses and instructors can provide meaningful data about effective educationa...
The widespread use of student ratings of instruction prompts the important question, "Do differ...
A burgeoning literature has documented the influence of adjunct instructors on student subsequent in...
Based on a dataset on two- and four-year college students and instructors from an anonymous state th...
We develop a model that identifies a range of new and somewhat counterintuitive results about how th...
The present multiyear study sheds light on the effects of faculty status on student evaluations of t...
Graduate and undergraduate students were asked to rate hypothetical teachers in a full-factorial, fu...
In this article, I address the paradox that university grade point averages have increased for decad...
This paper studies the effect that part-time instruction has on students ’ final grades in the princ...
Understanding the relationship between grading practices and student evaluations is especially impor...
This article examines how a faculty member's status-'either tenured or tenure-track-'might affect th...
The widespread use of student evaluations to rate faculty has raised the question of whether high st...
Grade inflation has long been an issue in academia, and with this comes the concern that instructors...
An exploratory study was launched to redress a gap in the literature that is expressed as an assumpt...
Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs) do not measure teaching effectiveness, and their widespread u...
Student assessment of courses and instructors can provide meaningful data about effective educationa...
The widespread use of student ratings of instruction prompts the important question, "Do differ...