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A Young Person's Guide To The Grading System Summary

Decent Essays

Would you consider yourself as a grade junkie? Do you always strive for an A and take nothing less? In his essay “A Young Person’s Guide to the Grading System,” Jerry Farber argues that the grading system is not a good way of evaluating students academically. He believes that with the grading system the way it is, students’ do not try to learn; they only push towards getting a good letter grade. Though some may disagree, Farber's view on the grading system is true.

Farber writes about academic success not being measured in knowledge, but in grade points. He went on to say, “Academic success, as everyone knows, is something that we measure not in knowledge but in grade points. What we get on the final is all-important; what we retain after the final is irrelevant. Grades don’t …show more content…

Most students’ do assignments and prepare for tests only to get a good grade. They do not care about learning, as long as they are able to graduate. Learning does not come from being graded, it takes discipline and passion to learn. When trying to learn something new most people practice and or study rather than being graded.

Ferber’s credit system is better than the grading system. The credit system will allow students to worry less and focus more on their work. Rather than constantly worrying about what grade they are going to get students will be able to do their work with ease, allowing them to feel less stressed. Students may learn more if they are not graded. Since grades are not being pounded down the student's throat, that student is not doing the work to get a good grade. The credit system will also help those who are unable to pass a course, this is because the failed class will not affect the student's’ transcript..

Farber’s view on the grading system is accurate. The grading does more bad than good, causing students to get stressed and not learn. Students’ spend most of their

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