Harvard faculty votes to limit number of A's awarded
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Harvard University faculty members voted to cap the number of A's awarded to students in an effort to make the grades more meaningful. …
Harvard University faculty members voted to cap the number of A's awarded to students in an effort to make the grades more meaningful. By a vote of 458 to 201, faculty approved a measure that caps the number of A grades to 20%, plus four additional per class, the university confirmed Wednesday. There is no limit to the number of A-'s or other grades that can be given out. Another measure that would have allowed courses to opt out of the cap was rejected, 364 to 292. The new policy , which only applies to undergraduate students, goes into effect in the fall of 2027 and will be reassessed after three years. In a statement, members of the Subcommittee on Grading said it was a critical policy for students because "[a] Harvard A grade will now tell them, as well as employers and graduate schools, something real about what a student has achieved." "Today the Harvard faculty voted to make their grades mean what they say they mean. For decades, grade inflation has been a collective-action problem: everyone saw it, but no one faculty member could fix it alone. The faculty have now taken a major step to fix it together," the subcommittee said. Harvard began considering the change after the subcommittee found that too many students were getting A's. …
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