Consistency of Classes

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CapnCrunch

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I understand that classes across different universities cannot be "standardized" as there is little or no communication between faculty so what is considered "important", grade calculation, whether or not there is homework, test format, etc... varies greatly. However, do any of you feel that there is a lack of consistency among same level classes (course name and number being equivalent) in your own university?

For example, my organic chemistry class with professor A currently has 3 tests (300 points), online homework (100 points), a final (200 points). The lowest grade on an exam is dropped and if the lowest is a final, then half of it is dropped. However, almost 20 points in total have been awarded if certain lengthy and complicated homework assignments are completed. The tests sometime contain one or two multiple choice questions and sometimes one or two comparative (rank which is the best base, stability, etc...). There is no curve for the class (so far). The questions on the exams are easier than professor B and it is widely accepted that the quality of teaching of professor B is unmatched to any other professor teaching organic chemistry. The syllabus has changed several times throughout the course and all of it was for the benefit of the students. One such change (that I find to be beyond ridiculous) is that he offered a "Final Contract" for any student, which basically says that you agree to have the final exam count as your ONLY grade. This was meant for people who were failing the course, but many others decided to do it as well. We'll see how that works out.

Professor B on the other hand gives four exams (400 points), and a final exam (200 points). The final is not eligible to be dropped (to my knowledge) and the lowest scored exam of the four is dropped. Each test, however, is curved to something of modified bell curve. The averages vary from year to year and each class (each section has their own curve). The class scored surprisingly well for the first exam so below an 86% was considered a C. All the following exams had averages of around 45-65 and each were curved accordingly. However, even though the quality of teaching is higher, he prides himself on ensuring that there is a wide distribution of scores. Meaning that few or no people will do 100% level work (like the MCAT 😉). Though, a lot of people agree that the students in Professor B's class are well prepared for the next semester of organic chemistry.

Generally speaking, people in Professors A's class have a higher grade in Professor B's class. However, both are awarded the same level of difficulty for each class (none is weighted more than the other). This inconsistency leads to a lack of standardization and a way to effectively compare two candidates based solely on grades. This was also true for an English class I took where the instructor missed 7+ days due to a variety of reasons and then somehow lost here gradebook (not kidding). Grading was easy to begin with (A-thought out work, B-you completed the assignment, but this is obviously a rough draft, C-you forgot to put in a conclusion/paragraph, F-you were stupid enough to plagiarize even though I give such inflated grades), but then because she lost her grade book so if you went back and returned the original graded essays, you'd receive an entire letter grade better on one of your papers.

I'm thinking this is happening to me because I go to a large university, but classes like gen chem have recently been standardized. The lectures are all made on powerpoint and all the professors teaching that year meet together and plan out the semester. The lectures are exactly the same, but some more emphasis on certain problems and the difference in some examples used are inevitable. They all receive the exact same test and the grades are curved for the all the students as if it were a single class. The instructors vary (obviously), but at least this way you measure how effective a professor is. Plus, from years to come, if nothing major changes in the material, someone who took this course five years down the road could accurately compare their grade to someone who receives a grade now.

Does anyone else have this problem or something similar? I might be one of few because I go to such a large university (30,000+).

Btw, thanks for making it to end if you read this, I'm surprised how long this turned out to be.
 
Yes. Especially the intro math classes we had. A lot were taught be TA's or junior profs and some were god awful. It was a real lottery to see who would end up w/ teh good ones
 
TBH I did not read it, I skimmed it. Conclusion:

Professors suck. How to prevent them form screwing you over?
Change out if you KNOW before hand they suck, or think of it this way.

Someone who got an A in Prof A's Class is not as smart as (or was pushed hard enough as)
Someone who got an A in Prof B's Class.

In addition, a lot of profs curve so it should not matter what your grade is because he/she may be a complete dick. It's how well you fare when compared to others.

If your 100% sure a teacher is gonna suck and just fails everyone with no curve then by all means switch out. You have like a week or so to do so at the start of each term.

Just my thoughts.
 
TBH I did not read it, I skimmed it. Conclusion:

Professors suck. How to prevent them form screwing you over?
Change out if you KNOW before hand they suck, or think of it this way.

Someone who got an A in Prof A's Class is not as smart as (or was pushed hard enough as)
Someone who got an A in Prof B's Class.

In addition, a lot of profs curve so it should not matter what your grade is because he/she may be a complete dick. It's how well you fare when compared to others.

If your 100% sure a teacher is gonna suck and just fails everyone with no curve then by all means switch out. You have like a week or so to do so at the start of each term.

Just my thoughts.

True True. But as far as the university standards... If it worked for one gen ed class, there's a good chance it will work for most of them. It shouldn't be that difficult for people from the faculty to say, "hey maybe we should work together".
 
Are "curved" grades pretty much the standard for universities?
 
Are "curved" grades pretty much the standard for universities?

Not necessarily, and in my experience when they do curve they always curve UP not down. In my school the averages for O-Chem 1 exams are like 40%, so if they didn't curve the classes we'd all be screwed.

Some professors say they don't "curve" exams, but they curve the final grade. And often it's not really a bell curve either, since they give wayy too many A's for it to be a true distribution.
 
I go to a school w/ 18k+ students and as you mentioned for the english/writing classes the differentiation in professors can be absurd at time. There are professors known to just give most every student a 4.0 or just grade much easier while other professors who feel as though no student deserves a 4.0 unless they are absolutely outstanding... I cannot stand subjective classes.

It's funny that you mentioned organic chemistry because at my University there are a few organic teachers, but it seems as though 2-3 of these profs have almost the exact grading scale while one professor is rather lenient and although he doesn't curve he offers large amounts of extra credit with easy easy tests and what-not.

There are definitely a lot of discrepancy in classes taught, even the gen chem and the first year bio, depending on the prof and semester you can have huge discrepancies in what is taught and learned. I really recommend using rate my professor because it can help one distinguish between the types of professors that are teaching the classes and although everything must be taken with a grain of salt, the comments usually end up being pretty accurate and at times I have regretted not listening to them.
 
I go to a school w/ 18k+ students and as you mentioned for the english/writing classes the differentiation in professors can be absurd at time. There are professors known to just give most every student a 4.0 or just grade much easier while other professors who feel as though no student deserves a 4.0 unless they are absolutely outstanding... I cannot stand subjective classes.

It's funny that you mentioned organic chemistry because at my University there are a few organic teachers, but it seems as though 2-3 of these profs have almost the exact grading scale while one professor is rather lenient and although he doesn't curve he offers large amounts of extra credit with easy easy tests and what-not.

There are definitely a lot of discrepancy in classes taught, even the gen chem and the first year bio, depending on the prof and semester you can have huge discrepancies in what is taught and learned. I really recommend using rate my professor because it can help one distinguish between the types of professors that are teaching the classes and although everything must be taken with a grain of salt, the comments usually end up being pretty accurate and at times I have regretted not listening to them.
 
Does anyone have classes that are "standardized" like I mentioned with gen chem?

And as far as rate my professor goes, it's accurate maybe 70% of the time. Often times, the people that post are just really enraged with their final grade or extremely happy with it. There used to be a site that actually released the distribution of grades from the previous semester. But as far as I can tell, it's a pay-for service.

EDIT: The site used to be called pick-a-prof, but it merged with myEdu or something.
 
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At my school there used to be one professor who was extremely difficult for Chem II and 2 or 3 others who were more lenient. Then one of the other professors began co-teaching with the hard guy(basically use the same exams and notes) and now I think all the professors use the hardest guys exams/notes so it is pretty much standardized.

I understand why they decided to do this b/c there was a huge difference in the difficulty of Chem II classes. I had the hard guy and when I showed my exams to people in other chem II classes they had no idea how to solve any of the problems.

In general though for the weed out classes that are large enough to be taught by multiple professors there is some variability in difficulty/grading. In most of my engineering classes even though the classes were big, one prof could teach like two periods of 250-300 people each and then give the same exam so there wouldn't be difference in the grades.
 
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