preview

College Students Are Getting Better Grades

Decent Essays

College students today are getting better grades while producing the same level of work, according to a study on GradeInflation.com.
The website uses research found by Stuart Rojstaczer, a former professor at Duke University, and Christopher Healy, a professor at Furman university. The website was last updated on March 29 and uses data over the last 70 years from over 400 schools in the United States, with a combined enrollment of over 4 million undergraduates.
Students are in what he calls the “consumer era,” according to Rojstaczer’s website. With students paying so much for college and its subsequential debt, professors are under more pressure to give higher grades.
Rojstaczer said on his website that “when you treat a student as a customer, the customer is, of course, always right.”
According to Rojstaczer’s website, grade inflation began in the Vietnam era. Before the war, C’s were the most grades on college campuses. But once the war began, professors felt pressure to give male students better grades to prevent them from failing school and being eligible in the draft.
When the war ended, the rise in grades leveled out again, only to rise once again during the consumer era, which began in the early 1980s and continues to this day.
Rojstaczer’s research shows that GPA’s have been rising on average 0.1 points per decade since the 1980s, with the average college student GPA in 2013 at 3.15.
Additionally, the number of A’s given out has been going up 5 to 6 percent per

Get Access