While the nature and causes of university grade inflation have been extensively studied, little empirical research on the consequence of this phenomenon is currently available. The present study uses data for 48 US law schools to analyze admission decisions in 1995, 2000, and 2007, a period during which university grade inflation appears to have been prevalent. Controlling for a number of admissions characteristics, the analysis suggests that higher rates of grade inflation were associated with greater increases in emphasis on standardized test scores between 1995 and 2000. On the contrary, although grade inflation continued between 2000 and 2007, law schools appeared to have reduced the importance of both grades and test scores as admissio...
Grade inflation in academic institutions. Is it a subject so complex and pervasive in education that...
This paper examines the continual increase in the proportion of ‘good’ honour degrees awarded by UK ...
We consider a game in which schools compete to place graduates in two distinct ways: by investing in...
This study examines the change in undergraduate term grade point average (GPA) for students at one l...
This study compares grade inflation rates among different ability students at a large, open admissio...
Grade inflation impacts university credibility, student courses of study, choices of institution, an...
textGrades are the fundamental currency of our educational system; they incentivize student performa...
This study examined the change in term grade point average (GPA) from 1974 through 2004 for 368,282 ...
abstract: Grade inflation in modern universities across the United States has been documented since ...
In many educational settings, students may have an incentive to take courses where high grades are e...
The first-year performance of freshmen between 1987 and 1992 was investigated for evidence of grade ...
College GPAs in the United States rose substantially between the 1960’s and the 2000’s. Over the sam...
This Article contends that every American law school ought to substantially eliminate C grades by se...
Grade inflation presents pedagogical and safety concerns for nursing educators and is defined as a ...
Grade inflation is a long-standing problem whose seriousness is demonstrated by a wide variety of st...
Grade inflation in academic institutions. Is it a subject so complex and pervasive in education that...
This paper examines the continual increase in the proportion of ‘good’ honour degrees awarded by UK ...
We consider a game in which schools compete to place graduates in two distinct ways: by investing in...
This study examines the change in undergraduate term grade point average (GPA) for students at one l...
This study compares grade inflation rates among different ability students at a large, open admissio...
Grade inflation impacts university credibility, student courses of study, choices of institution, an...
textGrades are the fundamental currency of our educational system; they incentivize student performa...
This study examined the change in term grade point average (GPA) from 1974 through 2004 for 368,282 ...
abstract: Grade inflation in modern universities across the United States has been documented since ...
In many educational settings, students may have an incentive to take courses where high grades are e...
The first-year performance of freshmen between 1987 and 1992 was investigated for evidence of grade ...
College GPAs in the United States rose substantially between the 1960’s and the 2000’s. Over the sam...
This Article contends that every American law school ought to substantially eliminate C grades by se...
Grade inflation presents pedagogical and safety concerns for nursing educators and is defined as a ...
Grade inflation is a long-standing problem whose seriousness is demonstrated by a wide variety of st...
Grade inflation in academic institutions. Is it a subject so complex and pervasive in education that...
This paper examines the continual increase in the proportion of ‘good’ honour degrees awarded by UK ...
We consider a game in which schools compete to place graduates in two distinct ways: by investing in...