A real simple way to fix this would be to standardize grading systems and definitions...but of course this would cede local control over education to the Feds, which I don't support.
Originally Posted by atlcomedy
Then you should be happy that a standardized grading system would only make education worse. I used to be in academia and I taught at a university. Here is what I see:
(1) The U.S. now only really stands out in graduate education, although undergraduate education is still very good. Secondary education is terrible. In my opinion a good part of the reason is that students compete for grades, not education. At the university level, the material covered in a course is given in the course catalog and instructors have the freedom to do whatever they want to meet the objectives of the course. This is even more evident at the graduate level where courses are really informal. In high schools, by contrast, teachers have little say in much of anything. I owe my decision to even go to college to a couple of teachers who bent the rules and essentially let me study on my own and show up if needed to ask a question. Otherwise, school was really boring and I can't say anything I know could be attributed to anything my high school teachers did right. Teachers are hired to teach. Let them run the classes to meet their students needs. Maybe they would be more creative and actually make subjectsinteresting.
(2) Ditch the grading system or at least reduce it to really corse intervals, like A, B, C, D, F (without the +/- refinements.) That would eliminate competing for a number istead of learning something. Ban electronically scored tests. Those don't test much of anything.
For the most part I think admissions directors and employers do a pretty good job of sifting thru all the bullshit and calibrating candidates.
That depends on what you mean by that. An Ivy League
school, for example gets more
well qualified applicants it could ever admit. They basically decide on who to admit based on other factors. State schools admit students based on minimum GPA and SAT/ACT scores in which having a low GPA can be offset by a high SAT score. They have to admit anyone who meets the requirements specified in the course catalog for that year. There isn't much to do in the way of deciding.
That said, the message to parents out there should be to get calibrated with current standards yourself so you can steer your children appropriately. Competition is fierce. What was "good enough" in your day to get into/get a scholarship to/etc/ probably isn't.
Not letting religious nut parents influence the curriculum would also help a lot. So would allowing school districts to choose their own books instead of letting the state do it. The state school boards (Texas, in particular) leave too much control in too few hands, so publishing companies lobby them heavily. I could go on and on, but I really don't see the point. As long as going to school is treated as competition for points (which will be forever) instead of an education, the education will get worse.