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The university where I teach has a problem with grade inflation.
There's no doubt that one can be concerned about grade inflation.
The grade inflation also lowers the standard of higher education.
There clearly has been some grade inflation but nothing to the extent of that down south.
Other countries don't seem to have this grade inflation problem.
If colleges pay the price for grade inflation, why do they allow it?
Everyone who teaches at a top university knows full well that this is grade inflation.
There really is no story here - it's grade inflation pure and simple.
But grade inflation is harder to detect than it seems.
But the reviews themselves suggest that a kind of grade inflation is taking place.
Basically, the states have embraced low standards and grade inflation.
Grade inflation makes it more difficult to compare students who took their exams at different times.
A. There's not as much grade inflation as you think.
But in an era of widespread grade inflation, grades here actually went down.
You touched on two aspects of grade inflation that deserve more attention.
But here it seems less a chance to make a buck than something akin to grade inflation.
Another interesting problem with academic integrity relates to grade inflation.
One study by a Swarthmore professor in 1993 found "significant grade inflation."
If ever there was a case of grade inflation this was it.
It was found that higher grade inflation points to lower provincial exam results.
With the self-esteem movement having led to rampant grade inflation, kids thought they were doing great.
Potential causes for grade inflation abound at the nation's colleges.
Yet is this any more pernicious than the grade inflation so rampant in society?
Grade inflation in high schools is elusive as well.
The truth is "grade inflation" doesn't exist in Private education.