Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data
abstract: Abstract: This study investigates grades from 1980 to 2010 in English 102 at Arizona State University Tempe Campus to see if grade inflation has taken place. It concludes it has and then goes on to study the causes. The data was collected from existing data held in the archives of the Regi...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-299622018-06-22T03:06:19Z Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data abstract: Abstract: This study investigates grades from 1980 to 2010 in English 102 at Arizona State University Tempe Campus to see if grade inflation has taken place. It concludes it has and then goes on to study the causes. The data was collected from existing data held in the archives of the Registrar's Office, collated into proper order and saved in proper numerical format for analysis. After analysis, the data was reviewed to establish whether or not as consumer demands rise, measured by student responses to evaluation questions, grade point averages rise as well, and whether demands for adequate performance in classrooms have declined. This study statistically analyzes students' final grades in ENG102 for thirty years and concludes that grade compression at the top of the grading scale exists. This study discusses the implications of that compression at length. Dissertation/Thesis Simmons, Cynthia Anne (Author) van Gelderen, Elly (Advisor) Gillon, Carrie (Committee member) Lockard, Joe (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Rhetoric Educational evaluation Education policy Commoditized Higher Education Grade Inflation Grading Policies eng 372 pages Doctoral Dissertation English 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29962 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015 |
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language |
English |
format |
Doctoral Thesis |
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Rhetoric Educational evaluation Education policy Commoditized Higher Education Grade Inflation Grading Policies |
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Rhetoric Educational evaluation Education policy Commoditized Higher Education Grade Inflation Grading Policies Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data |
description |
abstract: Abstract: This study investigates grades from 1980 to 2010 in English 102 at Arizona State University Tempe Campus to see if grade inflation has taken place. It concludes it has and then goes on to study the causes. The data was collected from existing data held in the archives of the Registrar's Office, collated into proper order and saved in proper numerical format for analysis. After analysis, the data was reviewed to establish whether or not as consumer demands rise, measured by student responses to evaluation questions, grade point averages rise as well, and whether demands for adequate performance in classrooms have declined. This study statistically analyzes students' final grades in ENG102 for thirty years and concludes that grade compression at the top of the grading scale exists. This study discusses the implications of that compression at length. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation English 2015 |
author2 |
Simmons, Cynthia Anne (Author) |
author_facet |
Simmons, Cynthia Anne (Author) |
title |
Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data |
title_short |
Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data |
title_full |
Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data |
title_fullStr |
Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data |
title_full_unstemmed |
Grade Inflation in English 102: Thirty Years of Data |
title_sort |
grade inflation in english 102: thirty years of data |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29962 |
_version_ |
1718700788230914048 |