Academic
Dishonesty
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Elites
and Tyrants
College
education is a costly proposition with tuition, room and board at
some colleges topping $50,000 a year. Is it worth it? Increasing
evidence suggests that it's not. Since the 1960s, academic achievement
scores have plummeted, but student college grade point averages
(GPA) have skyrocketed. In October 2001, the Boston Globe
published an article entitled "Harvard's Quiet Secret: Rampant
Grade Inflation." The article reported that a record 91 percent
of Harvard University students were awarded honors during the spring
graduation. The newspaper called Harvard's grading practices "the
laughing stock of the Ivy League." Harvard is by no means unique.
For
example, 80 percent of the grades given at the University of Illinois
are A's and B's. Fifty percent of students at Columbia University
are on the Dean's list. At Stanford University, where F grades used
to be banned, only 6 percent of student grades were as low as a
C. In the 1930s, the average GPA at American colleges and universities
was 2.35, about a C plus; today the national average GPA is 3.2,
more than a B.
Today's college
students are generally dumber than their predecessors. An article
in the Wall Street Journal (1/30/97) reported that a "bachelor
of Arts degree in 1997 may not be the equal of a graduation certificate
from an academic high school in 1947." The American Council
on Education found that only 15 percent of universities require
tests for general knowledge; only 17 percent for critical thinking;
and only 19 percent for minimum competency. According a recent National
Assessment of Adult Literacy, the percentage of college graduates
proficient in prose literacy has declined from 40 percent to 31
percent within the past decade. Employers report that many college
graduates lack the basic skills of critical thinking, writing and
problem-solving and some employers find they must hire English and
math teachers to teach them how to write memos and perform simple
computations.
What is being
labeled grade inflation is simply a euphemism for academic dishonesty.
After all, it's dishonesty when a professor assigns a grade the
student did not earn. When a university or college confers a degree
upon a student who has not mastered critical thinking skills, writing
and problem-solving, it's academic dishonesty. Of course, I might
be in error calling it dishonesty. Perhaps academic standards have
been set so low that idiots could earn A's and B's.
Read
the rest of the article
October
17, 2009
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
Copyright
© 2009 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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