Doctor&Geek said:
Sorry, this is EXACTLY the same system used before the grading change to quartiles. Not only that, but every residency program director got breakdowns for grades i.e. % of As for every class, %Bs, etc.
Really, I'm becoming more convinced that we should just axe P4 and group it with P2/P3.
If one must merely report P#, and If the typical grade difference between P2 and P4 is less than 10 points (out of 100), then I would agree that P4 should be lumped with P2/P3.
This amounts to an Honors Pass/Pass/Fail system, which might be enough of a change to reduce the crazy & bitterness I have heard over the current P# system.
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Mere %As, %Bs, etc, plus the letter grade is not enough info to know how that individual did in terms of quartiles. However, while it does not provide a number that relates the performance of one to the others, it *does* give a general feel for how that person did relative to the group. I bet the residency directors *also* got the quartile or percentile info for each student.
There are several issues here:
how much info does the student have about her grades and her standing?
how much info does the residency director have about her grades and her standing?
are the two sets of info identical, and should they be?
It may be that giving students too much info leads to hypercompetiveness, which apparently some people don't like. (I enjoy competition, but not if it leads to crazy behaviors, stress disorders (in me), or bratty acting out by my classmates). On the other hand, I tend to believe that intelligent people deserve to have access to as much information about their situation as possible. Autonomy is an issue here, you see. I'm not sure that residency directors should have info about my grades that I don't have as well, since I have a right to (reasonably) determine my fate (which is a function of how well I can control the outcomes (grades, etc) that the directors have access to).
Personally, I like to know how I did, percentile wise, relative to my classmates. I would, however, be content with either the system I suggested in the earlier post, or D&G's version of the honors pass/pass/fail system.