Saturday, February 07, 2004
The Problem of Grade Inflation
By Diana Hsieh @ 11:45 AM

I've long known that grade inflation is a serious problem at American universities, so the hard data on this page was quite interesting. It shows an increase of .15 in 10 years in average student GPA. Frankly, I wonder about the trends over the past 50 years, as I doubt that the early 1990s is a good baseline.

Of course, the problem of grade inflation isn't the only or largest problem. The real issue is that institutional education is not nearly as demanding, comprehensive, focused, and integrated as it ought to be. Students are put through the motions of education without actually learning as much, as deeply, or as broadly as they ought to. For the dedicated learner, the only solution to the gross inadequacy of institutional education is self-education... but then what's the point of the institutional education at all? Frankly, I'm ready to start a movement for homeschooling in undergraduate and graduate education.

On the flip side, we might ask: What is a professor (or teacher) to do? Obviously, fighting for a more demanding curriculum and stricter standards throughout the institution could be a worthwhile goal, if it weren't so likely to be wholly ineffective. In large classes, grading on a curve may well be a good option to prevent grade inflation. (However, that might only increase the incentive to make the classes easier.) And really, how much can any educator (or even institution) do when the students coming to them are so completely undereducated? (A friend of mine teaching introductory philosophy tells me that students often can't even write vaguely coherent "stream of consciousness" essays. That indicates something quite horrible about the quality of their thinking.) Merely instituting stricter standards might not be all that helpful to students who have suffered from years of bad education. Yet accommodating the ignorance of incoming students (e.g. by accepting them and then placing them in remedial courses) merely perpetuates the problem.

The necessary impetus for change is unlikely to come from universities, as backing up their demands would require a willingness to dramatically decrease enrollment. Change must start with primary and secondary education, then trickle down to the universities. Homeschooling, school choice, vouchers, objective graduation requirements, and so on surely make a difference, but only for a small number of individual students. Until the public school system is junked, substantial change seems beyond reach.

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Thursday, February 05, 2004
Amazon-O-Rama
By Diana Hsieh @ 7:47 PM

Will Wilkinson pointed me to this excellent review of Charles Murray's new book Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950. I had been thinking of ordering it, and the review sealed the deal. It promises to be a fascinating study of the movers and shakers of human culture.

I also ordered a number of books on communism and the Soviet Union, as I've been wanting to read more about that terrible history for some time. I must admit, I went a bit overboard:

  • Gulag: A History by Anne Applebaum
  • Communism: A History by Richard Pipes
  • The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression by Stephane Courtois, et al
  • The Gulag Archipelago: 1918-1956 by Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn
  • In Denial: Historians, Communism, and Espionage by John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr
  • Kolyma Tales by Varlam Shalamov
  • The Great Terror: A Reassessment by Robert Conquest

    I even branched out for a bit of Chinese communism with Nien Cheng's Life and Death in Shanghai. I've wanted to read her book for years now, ever since she came to speak at my high school. I remember the incongruity of her tough-as-nails spirit inside the body of a petite, elderly, almost frail Chinese woman.

    On a lighter note, I ordered the DVDs of the two Jackie Chan / Owen Wilson movies, Shanghai Noon and Shanghai Knights. I'm generally not much of a fan of comedies, but I love Jackie Chan's wholesome comedic style and beautiful stunt work, particularly when paired with Owen Wilson as the goofy, loveable, and thoroughly modern rogue. (I also really liked Owen Wilson in his much more serious role in Behind Enemy Lines. Go figure.)

    Ah, what would I ever do without Amazon?!?

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  • The Catholic Professor
    By Diana Hsieh @ 11:10 AM

    This is the first FIRE case I've heard of involving a philosophy department:

    FIRE has come to the defense of a philosophy professor who has been stripped of his classes for refusing to veil his religious identity from students. Dr. James Tuttle, a Catholic philosopher at Lakeland Community College, near Cleveland, Ohio, was told that he might "be happier in a sectarian classroom" and was threatened with dismissal for making statements on his syllabi and in class that disclosed his religious faith and its effect on his views of ethics and philosophy.

    Dr. Tuttle has endured persecution for months, and now faces losing his job. FIRE has begun its advocacy efforts on behalf of his academic, legal, and moral rights.


    I would wish Dr. Tuttle luck, but with FIRE on the case, I doubt he'll need it!

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    Sunday, February 01, 2004
    Family Friendly Halftime Show
    By Diana Hsieh @ 7:52 PM

    Goodness me, I was just so impressed with the family-friendly Super Bowl halftime show tonight. First, there was Nelly's performance of "Hot in Herre" (Refrain: "It's getting hot in here (so hot) so take off all your clothes"). Then we had Justin Timberlake (intentionally or not) tearing off a portion of Janet Jackson's S&M-ish leather outfit to reveal her breast, as this photo shows. (You can see the missing piece of clothing in his hand.) She didn't look happy, as this photo indicates. (Despite the captions on this photo, her outfit did not merely "come undone.") CBS has already apologized for the incident. Oh, and there was also a streaker right before the 3rd quarter kickoff.

    It was all just a bit freaky. But at least the game was good.

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