Originally Posted By: javacontour
Therefore, are you sure you want to say that A grades are in unlimited supply? They are based on the scores and numbers of students graded in most cases.
Based on my observation, B is considered "failure" in graduate school so professors tend to give out mostly As and rarely [censored] in grad school. This also applies to the undergraduate in "elite schools" as the students are more demanding and would demand the professors to "justify" why he or she doesn't deserves an A, as well as using family connection and contribution to pull influence / annoyance to the professors.
This, by the way, extend to people working in the "investment bank" where anyone who has to deal with customers are "vice presidents" even if there is no one under them. I know many IT "vice presidents" in these companies who do nothing more than an ordinary IT does in any other field.
However, in the less reputable schools, professors tend to "curve down" the grades because they don't believe that more than 10% of the people deserves As, and if you get 95 on an exam where most people get 98, you deserve a B or C. Unfortunate and unfair? You bet, because this world is unfair.
Therefore, are you sure you want to say that A grades are in unlimited supply? They are based on the scores and numbers of students graded in most cases.
Based on my observation, B is considered "failure" in graduate school so professors tend to give out mostly As and rarely [censored] in grad school. This also applies to the undergraduate in "elite schools" as the students are more demanding and would demand the professors to "justify" why he or she doesn't deserves an A, as well as using family connection and contribution to pull influence / annoyance to the professors.
This, by the way, extend to people working in the "investment bank" where anyone who has to deal with customers are "vice presidents" even if there is no one under them. I know many IT "vice presidents" in these companies who do nothing more than an ordinary IT does in any other field.
However, in the less reputable schools, professors tend to "curve down" the grades because they don't believe that more than 10% of the people deserves As, and if you get 95 on an exam where most people get 98, you deserve a B or C. Unfortunate and unfair? You bet, because this world is unfair.
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