Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grade inflation does not equal lack of academic rigor.
Kids can go to bad schools with low quality instruction but still fight for As, in which case their parents would be proud and unaware that their children's education is subpar.
The best you can do, OP, is to encourage these kids to take national exams. That is quite literally the only way to know where they rank. SAT, ACT or AP exams. If they have decent scores, it means their core classes had to count for something.
Kids with fake As will bomb the SAT and parents say their kid just isn’t a good test taker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to high school in a small, ordinary suburban high school and could easily hold my own in college with people from MoCo, Long Island, NE prep schools, etc.
Are you Asian-American?
Which college?
What major?
Anonymous wrote:seconding everyone who is saying that grade inflation is FAR worse in upper-middle-class public schools and in private schools. So it's entirely possible the your in-laws As are actually more accurate.
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former private school teacher who once gave a senators granddaughter a B and who should have seen the s***storm that ensued.
Anonymous wrote:Grade inflation does not equal lack of academic rigor.
Kids can go to bad schools with low quality instruction but still fight for As, in which case their parents would be proud and unaware that their children's education is subpar.
The best you can do, OP, is to encourage these kids to take national exams. That is quite literally the only way to know where they rank. SAT, ACT or AP exams. If they have decent scores, it means their core classes had to count for something.