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Following up on a number of high-profile newspaper pieces on the relative decline of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) students in U.S. universities, Timothy Taylor explains that grade inflation might have a lot to do with the mass migration to the humanities and other “soft” subjects. Basically, students like good grades, and STEM departments have driven many students away with low average grades. Taylor looks through the academic research on the subject, and digs up an estimate that “if the English department adopted the Math grade distribution, there would be a decline of 47 percent in the number of students taking one or more courses beyond the introductory course in English.”

Why has grade inflation affected the STEM subjects less than the arts and letters? Taylor provides a few reasons, relating to the role that grades play in shaping the undergraduate population to the school’s needs: 

We took another swing at the issue of grades and course choice with a couple of articles in our Summer 2009 issue. Alexandra C. Achen and Paul N. Courant asked “What Are Grades Made Of?” They argue: “Grades are an element of an intra-university economy that determines, among other things, enrollments and the sizes of departments. … Departments generally would prefer small classes populated by excellent and highly motivated students. The dean, meanwhile, would like to see departments supply some target quantity of credit hours-the more the better, other things equal-and will penalize departments that don’t do enough teaching. In this framework, grades are one mechanism that departments can use to influence the number of students who will take a given class.”

Taylor concludes: 

In short, grade inflation in the humanities has been contributing to college students moving away from science, technology, engineering, and math fields, as well as economics, for the last half century. It’s time for the pendulum to start swinging back. A gentle starting point would be to making the distribution of grades by institution and by academic department (or for small departments, perhaps grouping a few departments together) publicly available, and perhaps even to add this information to student transcripts. 

View all comments (5) |

Dai Alanye | 11.14.11 @ 2:10PM

Another bandaid, anyone?

Solve this problem and others by cutting at the root. Do away with Federal subsidies to higher education, be they student loans, Pell grants, student deferments, and any others. Starve the bloated unverstity staffs by again letting students work their way through college, or do sufficiently well to gain academic scholarships.

Yes, and the Department of Education needs to go dodo bird, of course.

This whole silly process started when we were told America needed to compete with the USSR in numbers of science and engineering grads, and it just seemed so "unfair" to bypass other disciplines. As a result, we now lead the world in Art History degrees among other less-practical studies, and ex-hippies have wormed their way into control of academia.

By and large, government subsidies do more harm than good in education as in most other fields. Without them, unbalanced grading systems - if they continue to exist - won't matter one way or another.

Occam's Tool| 11.14.11 @ 3:33PM

Also, get rid of athletic scholarships. The term is an oxymoron. Pay the kids, and pay them enough that they can take classes if they wish. Otherwise, University teams are for profit entities.

Occam's Tool| 11.14.11 @ 2:58PM

Biology Major, TCU, 1980-1984, graduated Magna Cum Laude, accepted to University of Illinois School of Medicine and University of Texas School of Medicine.

Manny Reinecke and Dave Minter did NOT grade inflate Organic Chemistry. Lawyers can be incompetent asses, as can historians. MDs get their asses sued off when it happens to them.

Quartermaster| 11.14.11 @ 7:48PM

STEM majors will have to live in the real world after they graduate. As an Engineer and Land Surveyor, if I took the sloppy attitudes I saw among the fuzzy faculty and students, I'd live in court. Instead, I have Lawyers coming to me trying to keep clients out of trouble. Several of those Lawyers poked fun at me when they were headed to Law School, and I was headed out into the world. They may get paid more than I do, but I'm usually home chilling while they are at the office.

More Blog Posts by Joseph Lawler

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/11/14/why-the-sciences-havent-seen-g

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