The Pros And Cons Of Grade Inflation

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Now a day, grade inflation has become widely discussed phenomena among educationists. Grade inflation is known as the rise in higher grades of students without an equal rise in their achievements. It is a process where grades are improving in the examination systems with the passage of time which are not resulting in an improved level of learning. This trend is ruining the standards of education and producing a large pool of unskilled educated people.They possess grades which represent them highly skilled and genius students (O’Grady, Quinn, 3).
Grade inflation is the result of grading system which started in late nineteenth century. Grading systems are almost similar in many countries of the world. Rewarding students with number and letter …show more content…

As education institutions are in competition of higher grades and attracting large population to get admission in their institutions. For this matter, they assure their students receiving high grades. When students know that they will easily get high grades, they stop working hard and become less efficient. This attitude lowers their skill level, and they fail to acquire good jobs. This also lowers their quality of learning as they do not bother to gather knowledge and run after grades. The education system is also responsible for this attitude as they focus on grade points and not on knowledge. Grading inflation is also affecting student’s dedication to learning and make efforts to score good marks because they can achieve high grades either …show more content…

For them, there is no such thing exist like grade inflation. They argue that achieving higher grades still requires equal hard work as compare to the past. Instead of grade inflation, they consider grade compression as the reason of lower quality of education. In grade compression, grades are shifting towards top grades as no of students achieving C grades is declining which means grades are compressing where most of the students are above average.
Some educationists also criticize the grading system and consider it the reason behind lower level of skills and inadequate knowledge. According to them, grading system cannot evaluate exact skills of all students. It can be illustrated as if a student has passed a course with B grade that means he has learned only 60 percent of that course while he does not possess 40 percent knowledge. Hence passing that course cannot assure that the student has complete knowledge and skills to handle that course.
Some educationists believe that awarding high grades have increased the competition. They think that getting higher grades requires efforts, and it will motivate students to do more hard work to achieve “A” because most of their contemporaries will be getting above average

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