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http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/why-failing-med-students-dont-get-failing-grades/
I think the biggest problem is that while grade inflation is widespread, it is not universal. As such, students who are given the appropriate score as prescribed by the rubric are left behind in the dust. For example, my school's rubric states that Honors should be reserved for the top 10% of students. In some clinical rotations at my school, upwards of 60% of students received Honors. This puts students who were graded according to the rubric as they should have been seem inferior, when in fact they were graded as they should have been. This is something that definitely should be addressed in the coming years.
I think the biggest problem is that while grade inflation is widespread, it is not universal. As such, students who are given the appropriate score as prescribed by the rubric are left behind in the dust. For example, my school's rubric states that Honors should be reserved for the top 10% of students. In some clinical rotations at my school, upwards of 60% of students received Honors. This puts students who were graded according to the rubric as they should have been seem inferior, when in fact they were graded as they should have been. This is something that definitely should be addressed in the coming years.
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