60 Percent of Grades at Harvard Were A's. Enough Is Enough
3 points
1 hour ago
| 3 comments
| nytimes.com
| HN
skyblock500
1 hour ago
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> "we gave full A’s to over 4,000 students, or more than 49 percent of the people we taught [...] they hadn’t all crossed the threshold of “extraordinary distinction” that the student handbook says a full A is supposed to represent" (Furman and Laibson).

Perhaps we should look into why they received A without actually actually crossing the required threshold, rather than imposing arbitrary percentage limits. From the other side, if they do all demonstrate "extraordinary distinction", why should 29% of them suffer and not receive an A? I don't think the problem here is the number of students receiving A's, but instead what an A actually means.

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AnimalMuppet
1 hour ago
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Since HN trims leading numbers: 60 Percent of grades at Harvard were As.
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paulpauper
1 hour ago
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Maybe this is obvious, but more selective admissions = smarter students= higher grades? if everyone is taking AP/enrichment courses and at the top of their class in high school, higher grades should not be surprise.
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skyblock500
1 hour ago
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This sounds like a logically correct assumption.

Does Harvard not take this into account and adjust their courses to actually be of a rigor that challenges students?

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