More than 150 US colleges and universities have adopted a pass-fail grading system for the spring semester, a spontaneous reaction to the coronavirus pandemic that could bring fundamental change across higher education.
The overwhelming majority of the institutions have made pass-fail an option, reflecting student concerns that work worthy of a top grade should not be lost in a bid to protect them from the challenges of finishing online.
A smaller share of the institutions 鈭 including some of the nation鈥檚聽聽鈭 have made pass-fail mandatory, aiming to protect less-resourced students suddenly thrust into off-campus situations and traumas that compromise their ability to fully address their studies.
Either way, several advocates said, the crisis-driven policy shifts are helping to illustrate their belief that letter grades need a major overhaul, having long provided a false sense of accuracy and objectivity.
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鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing inequities that were kind of swept under the rug before,鈥 said Laura Gibbs, an instructor in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Oklahoma who has taught in online formats for nearly two decades. 鈥淣ow they鈥檙e clear for all to see, and we鈥檙e going to have to do something.鈥
Beyond the considerable biases associated with letter grades, said Jesse Stommel, a digital learning expert at the University of Mary Washington,聽聽that they provide聽聽to other educators and employers聽聽motivation and enjoyment for聽.
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鈥淚 would do away with grades altogether,鈥 said Dr Stommel, a senior lecturer in digital studies.
Shortly after US colleges and universities began cancelling in-person classes and moving instruction online to avoid Covid-19 infections, a handful of institutions such as Georgetown University and Carnegie Mellon University announced pass-fail grades as an option.
Dr Gibbs began compiling聽, in a bid to convince her own institution to join. She now counts聽聽offering pass-fail as an option and聽, led by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, that made the shift mandatory.
In whatever mix of variations, she said, the number of participating institutions seems sure to grow, reflecting wide concern about the quality of online instruction that is being thrown together for the remainder of the spring semester, with virtually no advance warning.
鈥淚 think we鈥檙e going to see hundreds or thousands by the time this is all done,鈥 Dr Gibbs said.
罢丑别听聽many institutions have聽. At Mary Washington, Dr Stommel said, a student advocating a pass-fail policy compiled a 47-page document containing hundreds of student stories. Dr Stommel said his rough text analysis of it found common words that include 鈥渟truggle, depression, and of course, GPA.鈥
鈥淪o, you can see this awful position that students are in,鈥 he said.
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Harvard University is one of the elites that implemented a聽聽system, although a survey of students by their Undergraduate Council聽聽called Double A, in which all grades would be either an A or an A-minus.
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The council鈥檚 president, James Mathew, a junior in sociology, said that the intent was to avoid diluting anyone鈥檚 grade-point average. But,聽, he and others realised it 鈥渕ight even still reflect the different privilege among some of our students鈥, just as an optional pass-fail policy would do.
And, despite adopting mandatory pass-fail for undergraduates, Harvard has been less clear elsewhere. Its medical school applicants were not allowed to submit pass-fail grades if the applicant鈥檚 institution allowed a letter-grade option 鈭 a position Dr Stommel called 鈥渕orally bankrupt鈥. Harvard then聽聽after questioning by 探花视频, but still favoured letter grades 鈥渋f the option for such grades is offered鈥.
Among longer-term issues, said David Perry, an academic adviser to history students at the University of Minnesota, institutions need to create systems resilient enough to handle both extended and short-term shutdowns, 鈥渨ithout breaking everything the way we are now鈥.
Individual students also need better emergency options, Dr Gibbs said. Colleges usually have bailout grading policies for students facing a mid-semester crisis, but they are often quite limited and harsh, she said.
鈥淚f we鈥檙e going to accommodate a whole campus full of students in crisis, why can鈥檛 we accommodate individual students in crisis?鈥 Dr Gibbs asked.
But advocates of change should not underestimate the number of places inside and outside of higher education that rely on letter grades, Dr Perry said. They include admissions and transfer policies, graduate and professional programmes, accreditation and financial aid, he said.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a whole ecosystem based on getting enough A through F grades to then qualify for stuff,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 going to have to be shifted.鈥
Getting rid of letter grades entirely isn鈥檛 realistic, Dr Stommel said. The goal, he said, should be a broad conversation 鈭 with students in a central role 鈭 aimed at finding where grades are really necessary, where they are not, and what good alternatives could be created.
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