GRADUATE GRADING STANDARDS
Click here for undergraduate grading standards
As you may know, grade inflation is a problem
in the CSU system, and my standards are intended to
contribute to the correction of this problem
by restoring the value of grades as an indicator of how well a student
has grasped the material, and of what that student's abilities are in relayi
ng the material to
another person using academic English.
This page is intended to explain the standards I use in
grading, so that you know what to expect
and understand how I evaluate your work.
Standards for graduate work are higher than for undergraduate work. Independent thinking, taking the initiative in posing and trying to answer question s, doggedness in developing analytical skills, and overall higher expectations for achievement are the hallmark of the good graduate student. I believe that a graduate degree is a marker of above-averageskills and competence in the area being studi ed. Possession of a master's degree is supposed to mark you off as not just more educated, but also more intelligent and competent, with greater expertise in your discipline, than someone without a graduate degree. If instructors do not hold graduate stud ents to higher standards than undergraduates, the value of your graduate degree will decrease.
Being an instructor in a department awarding
a master's degree in English, I hold st udents to very high standards regarding
the quality of their writing. I grade all written work on the quality
of the writing as
well as coverage of content / mastery
of analytical skills. Work that is not presented in well-written
academic English conforming to most
grammar rules is not eligible for an A, regardless of the
quality of the content.**
My grading policy is additive, not subtractive.
In other words, all of you start at the same
point: 0. You work up from th ere depending
on (a) how much of the required material is present in
the work being graded; (b) how accurate
that material is; (c) how well-written it is.
• The 'A' grade range (A- to A+) is reserved for work that is outstanding. This means that it (1) shows exceptional talent in using academic English**, expressing intended meanings with flair and precision; (2 ) it shows perfect to near-perfect understanding of the necessary concepts and analytical tasks; (3) where appropriate, it shows the capacity to think creatively or to see implications beyond the immediate scope of the question. Work must be flawless to a ttain an A+/A. Work with minor flaws that is nonetheless excellent in other ways will earn an A-.
• A grade in the B range means that the work is accep table at the graduate level (B- range) to very good (B/B+). This work satisfies all (B+) or most (B/B-) of the requirements of the question/research task, shows the capability to think beyond the task by relating it to other areas of knowledge in or outsi de of the course; is neatly presented and shows above-average use of academic English. If the work is decently written and covers most of the required content, but has several minor flaws or one major flaw, the grade will be B-.
• A grade in the C range means that the work, while covering much of the required ground, does not show graduate-level analytic and expressive ability. Th at is, major and minor items may be missing or incorrect; and while the language may communicate most points adequately, it does not qualify as above-average academic prose.
• A grade in the D range
shows that the work does not, overall, achieve an acceptable level of coverage
of the requirements AND/OR the language is insufficient to make the writer's
points understandable to the reader. The content ma y be either incorrect
to an unacceptable degree, or very incomplete.
• A grade of F
indicates that so little of the required content is covered that grading
the paper is an exercise in futility. It may mean that very major points
have clearly not been grasped or have been misunderstood by the stude nt.
An F may also indicate that the ideas are expressed in such a way that
they are not at all understandable to the reader. A grade of F is also
awarded when assigned work is not handed in, or not handed in by the set
deadline (unless alternative arrange ments have been made personally with
the instructor).
** By 'academic English' I mean the variety
of Standard English used in academic and professional writing: grammar,
spelling, and punctuation in accord with the conventions of formal Standard
American English; a broad vocabulary, appropriately used; complexity and
variety of sentence structure, and mastery of the generally recognized
features of good academic style, such as par allelism, clarity, etc. It
also means excellent control of aspects of manuscript form such as indentation
of paragraphs, clean and readable copy, and conformity with the typographical
rules prescribed for each assignment.