Students Fail -- and Professor Loses Job :: Inside Higher Ed :: Higher Education's Source for News, and Views and Jobs: "One reason that this does not happen (outside Aird’s classes) is that many professors at Norfolk State say that there is a clear expectation from administrators — in particular from Dean Sandra J. DeLoatch, the dean whose recommendation turned the tide against Aird’s tenure bid — that 70 percent of students should pass.
Aird said that figure was repeatedly made clear to him and he resisted it. Others back his claim privately. For the record, Joseph C. Hall, a chemistry professor at president of the Faculty Senate, said that DeLoatch “encouraged” professors to pass at least 70 percent of students in each course, regardless of performance. Hall said that there is never a direct order given, but that one isn’t really needed.
“When you are in a meeting and an administrator says our goal is to try to get above 70 percent, then that indirectly says that’s what you are going to try to do,” he said. (Hoggard, the university spokeswoman, said that it was untrue that there was any quota for passing students.)"
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
OT: this is what I find when dealing with Photography students as well
And it makes no difference what school or what program. Most of the crap that the Universities teach doesn't help anyone but the University... to keep the money flowin... Idiotarianism at it's finest form.
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When I was a computer science professor, I typically failed 75% of my students from Programming 2 (the gateway course to declaring your major).
They couldn't hack it.
I didn't want to push them along, and they end up programming something important, like air traffic control, or a missile guidance system.
Passing quotas are ridiculous.
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