One of the nation’s most selective institutions is sounding the alarm about grade inflation. According to a new report, A’s account for about 60 percent of all grades awarded in 2025 at Harvard College, which houses the university’s undergraduate program. That’s a big jump from 2005, when less than a quarter of grades were A’s. The report has provoked a frenzied response, validating for critics the notion that “elite” colleges aren’t all they’re cracked up to be, and that Gen Z students are delicate snowflakes who can’t handle tough grading. The truth, of course, is more complicated. But the report provides a fascinating portrait of how Harvard views its own role as a sorter of talent, and it shines a light on universal debates over grading that extend far beyond Cambridge, Mass.
Related Reading
What’s Up With Grade Inflation? (College Matters podcast)
The Great Campus Charade: Students Are Learning and Studying Less — Yet Grades Go Up (The Review)
Why Does the Trump Compact Talk About Grading? (The Chronicle)
Guest
Beth McMurtrie, senior writer at The Chronicle of Higher Education
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