The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Thursday, May 13, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Detroit News VU review: A study in poor priorities A FEW WEEKS AGO the Detroit News published a series of stories reviewing the University, purporting to discuss in depth "Its Past, its Present, its Future." "The U. of M. - just how good is it?" the News asks in its first headline, and proceeds to answer the question in a way which illuminates an unfortunate set of priorities. What is more unfortunate is that those priorities resem- ble our administration's own. Reporter Stephen Cain's view of the University is at once ostentatious and superficial. He records a series of quotes from the University's highest officials as well as the results of national higher education surveys, but fails to report the views of a single student. The survey he cites foremost is one in which professional school deans throughout the country rate each other: thus, a group of much-nublished, interchangeable specialists pat each other on the back and reinforce a system of priorities which leaves students out in the cold, having to settle for the dubious undergraduates education provided by 500-seat lectures and harried teaching assistants. There is little doubt that the state is lucky to have an institution which provides such fine professional schools, and indeed it is probably true that they deserve to be ranked among the highest in the nation. The grad- uate schools play host to a distinguished list of exerts in their fields. and even undergraduates (all 29.000 of them) occasionally benefit from the lectures of these notables. But University leaders quoted in the News evidently regard such benefits as the main criterion for praise of the institution as a whole. They are fooling them- selves. Says Vice-President for Acadamic Affairs Frank Rhodes, the geology professor who ranks second in Uni- versity policy-making only to President Robben Flem- ing, "You can literally take your economics from some- body who has been chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, listen to a course in education from someone who served as secretary of Health, Edu- cation, and Welfare, take engineering from someone who has just built a major dam somewhere in the Middle East, and archaeology from a man who spends his sum- mers excavating Carthage." Rhodes is well aware that one can pick up Paul Mc- Cracken's and Wilbur Cohen's books at Ulrich's and achieve far deeper insight into their wisdom than one can glean from an hour-long lecture with a few hun- dred other huddled undergrads. Rhodes grants that as a undergraduate institution the University "is not an Am- herst, an Oberlin, or a Harvard," but his emphasis on the quality of the graduate schools as a criterion for overall excellence is misplaced. Undergraduate education at the University in inadequate, and no number of self-serving national surveys can rate Michigan high enough to change that situation and make its diploma more meaningful. Almost as discouraging as the administration's own view of the University's quality is the News' shallowly favorable presentation of the institution. Here a large- circulation newspaper covers a complex topic with shal- low reporting, then builds its superficial conclusions into a giant deception which serves to convince Michigan's taxpayers and the parents of students that their money is being spent wisely. It is not. Michigan undergraduates are being cheated by department heads and college deans who demand published works before polished teaching from their professors, and the state will let them go ' on if the University's gilt reputation remains untarnished. TODAY'S STAFF: News-Ann Marie Lipinski Mike Norton, Tim Schick, Jim Tobin Edit-Jay Levin Arts-Jeff Selbst Photo Technician-Steve Kagai. /d Maibox: Dissecting the ga deeinflation issue As we have received a heavy reader re- To The Daily: spsonse to Michael Rout/h's article (Grade in- During my four years at the University flaton: Mahing soasseone of everyone, May 5), of Michigan, I have acquired many distinct the Daily is devoing today's editorial page to memories of how students behave during mid- sone of the letters discissing the origins and terms and finals. I recall the time that I .ofgrade inflation had trouble preparing for a history of art i/pat r 'midterm because someone had stolen the slides ~~Te~~~;from the print study gallery; and the year To The Daily one of my friend's professors had to dictate Grade inflation is unquestionably the cur- rent "hot issue" storming the university com- munity. I am extremely disappointed that the Daily continues to publish only the opinions of administrators, teachers, and, most recent- ly, bystanders (Michael Routh, May 5), ig- noring student concern. As I see this issue, grade inflation is merely the latest in a long series of games played by incompetent ad- ministrators and instructors at the expense tof the student It seems to me that the very source of inflated grades stems from those who are protesting most vehemently: teach- ers. These people are assigning grades in the first place, and if they feel grades are in- flated, why not simply raise standards? I guess that isntoo simple, economically un- sound, or theoretically unfit, but has anyone tried it? Rather, after a series of meetings, discussions, etc. the administration and teach- ers cooperatively set out to remedy the situ- ation. These remedies are invariably not only myopic and insensitive to students, but treat only the symptom, and not the disease. The plus-minus system is the first such cure. With- out the 4.3 A+, the GPA, mathematically, can only be reduced. A reduced grade point reflects a treated symptom, but punishes the studen tut who was ever concerned about the student when the policy was decided any- way? As a second example, there is a move- ment afoot to add the class GPA to the course grade on the transcript. This remedy is de- signed to force lower grades by removing glaring discrepancies like "class 'C,' course 'A'." But what if this is the case? Suppose a class median is 30 points above the course median. Should those students be saddled with an ostensibly inflated C/A? " It seems to me that the very source of inflated grades stems from those who are protesting most vehemently, teachers.' -Harold Gallick 0 Apparently administrators and teachers have been out of school too long. At any school, at any time, there are "cake" courses, and everyone - yea, even administrators and teachers - takes some of these courses. But what about the majority of demanding courses and consciencious teachers? Let's not continue to ignore them, and let's not ignore the fine job these teachers are performing: educating students. After all, that alone is the ultimate function of the university. The basis of any grade, a test, paper, essay report or oral exam is simply not a measure of any student's achievement. The entire evaluation i.e. grading procedure, then, simply does not represent a student's achieve- ment. Stuck with this system anyway, why can't we trust the vast majority of evalua- tors who truly do their best to represent achievement by assigning A, B, C, D, or E? Why can t we leave bad enough alone, without making it worse? Harold Gallick May 8 (Editor's note - Mr. Galich's assertion that the Daily has ignored students' concerns of late in only publishing guest editorials by administrators and faculty is incorrect. The Daily frequently publishes student opinion; we solicit all views and print those which we find most interesting to the general reader- ship.) the final because someone had stolen all the copies of the test. I remember hearing the woes of many chemistry students who could not help their fellow students for fear that if they did, the median of the class would go up and they would suffer the consequen- ces. ,But as long as the Univer- sity places more importance on professors publishing than on their teaching, I believe R "easy A" courses will always exist along with grade infla- tion. . . -Lisa Varnier I agree with Mr. Routh when he states that in order for students to improve their minds, college must be more demanding. My question is, however, if present academic de- mands cause such cutthroat competition, what will be the result of increasing the difficulty of college courses? If it is so easy to get an A or a B in every college course, as Mr. Routh infers, why is the competition in classes so intense? I will admit that there are a number of courses which are considered "easy A" courses and I believe that they should either be abolish- ed or reconstructed to offer students a great- er challenge. But will this alone upgrade the quality of education? Lately, faculty and students have been so concerned with the deluge of A's and B's that they have forgotten that education consists of more than merely grades. I wonder if grade inflation is a problem of professors giving out too many high grades, or if it is more of a reflection of the quality of teaching at this school. If professors were allowed to spend more time on teaching and designing intellectually demanding courses perhaps there would be a decrease in the number of As and Bs award- ed. But as long as the University places more importance on professor's publishing than on their teaching, I believe "easy A" courses will always exist along with grade inflation simply because most professors do not have the time to both publish and teach. Lisa Varnier May7 To The Daily: College grading standards have declined. Grades are inflated. Yet the problem of grad- ing, to which Michael Routh addressed his opinion in "Grade Inflation: Making someone of everyone", is much more complex. I am not writing to argue the validity of his point that professors are demanding less of their students and that students are learning less. I am simply tired of the over-simplifications of problems which wetso often encounter in our media. There are so many other factors to be examined when deciding whether pres- ent grading practices are good or bad. I will name two of them. What is the role of higher education? Is learning the only concern of colleges as Mr. Routh implies? Is Mr. Routh saying that there are no positive benefits to students to whom As and Bs are easier to acquire? It is much more convenient to write an opinion omitting many complicating fac- tors than to approach the problem from all sides. But how honest is it? Linda Fabe Class of '78 May 9