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I dislike it as well, do you know what triggered the switch? I was perfectly fine with the old system.
 
I dislike it as well, do you know what triggered the switch? I was perfectly fine with the old system.
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I also dislike it and would rather have no pluses and minuses. In general it seems to hurt more than help. Also, it makes it harder to calculate your own grade.

Revision as of 16:33, 25 January 2010

Definitely against the plus and minus system. I got all As and one -A last semester and it wasn't a 4.0 ):

The +/- system is a two-edged sword, but in general I am against it.

I feel that the systems has more disadvantages than advantages. There now can be such a small window in certain classes to get the grade.

The problem is that most people shoot for the lowest possible grade they can get to still get the same letter grade. For example, most people aim to get a 90% in normal 10 point scale courses. These people (myself included) are the ones who feel like they are being penalized by the +/- system.

Minus's definitely hurt, besides you can get an A-(3.7) but not an A+(4.3).

I'm against the +/- system. I understand its usefulness in adding greater differentiation between people, but we could take this to the extreme and give percentages rather than letter grades. Furthermore, it seems that more often than not the grade we get in a class has a degree of arbitrarity to it due to the presence of curves--which I think are great, don't get me wrong. It simply seems wrong to become so rigorous and precise in our description of something that is, by its very nature, vague and somewhat arbitrary. I also agree with the last remark regarding A- and A+; I see the value of a B+ weighing out a B-, but what is the purpose of getting an A+? What does it balance out? Is the essential message is that there is no point in trying very hard in a class? -BD

I dislike it as well, do you know what triggered the switch? I was perfectly fine with the old system.

I also dislike it and would rather have no pluses and minuses. In general it seems to hurt more than help. Also, it makes it harder to calculate your own grade.

Alumni Liaison

Questions/answers with a recent ECE grad

Ryne Rayburn