Well, I have biases here. Sorry to say that. I go to Berkeley and I've had professors actually lower the class scale because they didn't think we were "smart" enough - these are classes in organic chemistry (non-premeds) and biochem courses, mind you. I've been cheated out of A grades because of this, and it really hurts my g.p.a. when a lot of science grades are padded with "B+"'s and not those nice "A"'s. I was slightly happy when the ex-dean of Adcom at UCSD medical gave a talk at our school and spoke with me about the g.p.a. factor. I was really concerned for my chances, but she told me that, at least at the UC med schools, they know that grade DEflation is common at UC Berkeley. No, not all professors do this, but many of mine did. On the other hand, some profs are easier and pretty much gave anyone A's (unfortunately, this did not apply to any science courses, though! damn.).
Well, that's my view. I'm happy they do adjust gpa's, but the lady at UCSD also told me that at Stanford, they realize there is grade INflation, and they take that into consideration too. Is it fair? In some ways it is and others it's not. Will it ever be fair? no, unless we can standardize grading systems for every single class at every single school, and that's not likely to happen anytime soon. So, let's not make this a screaming match about elitism. I go to a state school and got a great education, challenged myself by taking the "hard" chem and bio courses, and suffered in gpa but not in intellect. I have no idea where I'm going with this anymore, but I have a Spanish exam in about 1 hour (argh, class from 6:30-9pm is NOT pleasant 🙁 ), so now I have to go. I just want to let you all know that sometimes the adjustment is necessary.