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by caesil 651 days ago
Would be a very difficult transition for the first generation to live under the new normal where an A is now a C.

Would employers accept that and consider it fairly when judging against their grade-inflated predecessors? I doubt it.

3 comments

I've been through a change is grade range, others have too. Some countries moved from letters to numbers or to percentages to break with the previous system. It's not a difficult transition really - not compared to almost everything else happening at college level school.

And if the employers actually care about the grades, they'll learn about the change too. (But that's a minority)

> Would be a very difficult transition for the first generation to live under the new normal where an A is now a C.

In 2019 Germany, tens of thousands of pupils protested against what they thought were hard math tests on the "Abitur" – the last exam in school before university. Bad grades there would worsen their chances to secure a spot on a prestigious university or a desireable subject of study against pupils who got good grades from the old regime. (Or, if the next exam was easier, even against the next age cohort!)

None of my employers have ever cared about my college GPA, just the degree.
Mine have. I've not gotten selective jobs (that I really wanted) and they were blunt about that being the reason.
Was about to post the same point. As an example, a notation change of this kind was done recently for England's GCSE qualifications.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GCSE#Grades_and_tiering