ACT Scores Are Down. Grades Are Up. Something's Fishy.
Grade inflation is making test-optional college admissions unworkable.

High school students' grades keep getting better, but standardized tests tell a different story. According to new research, while grade inflation is continuing to drive high school grades up, students are slipping on more objective measures of learning. As more and more colleges are turning away from a recent shift towards test-optional admissions, this data indicates that asking students for their standardized test scores is increasingly necessary to gauge learning.
Last month, the ACT released research indicating that student GPA in the post-COVID-19 era has declined in its power to predict student success in college. In contrast, standardized test scores stayed relatively stable in their ability to predict whether students will receive passing grades in their first year of college.
According to researchers, the average high school GPA, measured on a 4.0 scale, has risen slightly since 2017, increasing from 3.44 to 3.59. While ACT scores stayed fairly stable from the mid-90s to 2019, they faltered during and after the pandemic, declining from 20.7 on a 36-point scale in 2019 to 19.5 in 2023. The decline was particularly steep between 2021 and 2022, falling from 20.3 to 19.8. While these drops seem small, they portend a significant problem.
"When we're talking about over a million students, then seeing a half-point drop in one year is a big decline….We haven't seen a change like that in the last 10 years or even in the last 30 years," Rose Babington, senior director for state partnerships at ACT, told Reason in 2022.
"For colleges, these findings indicate that using high school grade point average without a confirming alternative measure of achievement may lead them to fail to identify students who may need additional supports," the study reads. "These findings suggest that colleges should encourage students to submit their ACT scores so that colleges can better assess the potential success of students."
Another research paper, published earlier this year paints a similar picture. The study, from the Equitable Grading Project, looked at more than 30,000 grades from the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 school years. When compared to students' performance on corresponding standardized tests, researchers found that almost 60 percent of grades "did not match the standardized test scores designed to measure students' content knowledge of those courses." Two-thirds of these mismatched grades were inflated, an outcome that affected low-income, black, and Hispanic students most.
These results indicate that grade inflation is rampant, and colleges should turn back toward standardized testing in admissions if they want to reliably predict which student will be able to handle the rigors of college.
For now, more and more colleges are making this shift within the past year. Some of America's most influential and selective colleges—such as Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Georgetown, MIT, and Caltech—have reinstated standardized testing requirements. However, the heavy majority of U.S. colleges and universities are still test-optional, or even test-free, with more than 2,000 out of around 2,600 institutions ditching standardized tests.
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What JD Vance gets wrong about social passing
What did psarc score?
Psarc scored a 40…ounce.
Pretty low score for psarc. He took an online test once. Got a 140.
He meant to say that he got one 40.
No, he said "one for the road."
I was on payote when I took my sats . I got an 1800
-steven wright
" . . . may lead them to fail to identify students who may need additional supports . . . "
Should read:
. . . may lead them to fail to identify students who have no business in college.
Reason 2035: What's up with this cuckoo bananas DEI stuff going around the universities! And why is it mostly woman attending college?
Reason 2034: JD Vance is wrong about DEI. Also toasters.
Reason 2036: As the Chinese economy collapses the toaster shortage leads to worldwide civil unrest.
Too many young American men are, frankly, too lazy to work hard enough even to get the inflated grades. Then they join MAGA and blame everyone but themselves. No sympathy.
CHARLIE HALL!
I think the usual Libertarian/Reason solution would be a free market solution: Let the students decide whether they want to use Inflated grades, the SAT, the ACT, or any performance measure they can find on the internet. What could go wrong?
Free Market Solution!
I feel like the treasury should simply provide the requisite amount of currency and brown envelopes pre addressed to the correct admissions officers. Then high schoolers could attend the school of their choice.
Nice straw man, but no go! That is not even remotely a free-market solution. A free-market solution would be: no public or tax-funded educational institutions; no government-imposed education regulations and no requirement for participation in educational activities; no licensing of teachers; and no government funding of research grants. But nice try!
Two-thirds of these mismatched grades were inflated, an outcome that affected low-income, black, and Hispanic students most.
[Snickers] So... uh... just to be clear here; if someone were to say "Poor kids are just as bright and just as talented as white kids." your response would be "No."?
Saying something like that would be racist unless it was uttered by a prominent Democrat...that would never happen, right comrade.
Poor kids just need to sit around the record player to achieve like white kids do.
https://apnews.com/article/857ff63c9dbd4ac9988f51a30df00f05
Holy shit. This freak has been so brain dead for so long that I've forgotten some of his greatest hits. Anybody who voted for him, no matter how "strategically," should be required to STFU about politics for the remainder of human history.
There's definite stirring on the sidelines...
I went to HS in the 80s, the default grade was 0 and I had to earn my score from there. I joined the military and was a recruiter ~2000, anybody in the state that got out of HS with a B average, got money for college. Every HS kid I ran into had a B average, even if they were too ignorant to pass the military entrance exam. After I finished my career, I went to college in the 20teens. Now the default score was 100 and deductions were frequently so small, I cruised through with an easy A average (military work ethic helped, too). The teaching profession has totally lost it's integrity and grades are fairly meaningless; more of a reflection of the student parroting the proper political positions than actual work quality.
This line doesn't smell right.
Is that average GPA of ACT test takers, or college applicants? Cuz it sure ain't average of all students.
Exactly my thought. This can't be the total average or the grade inflation isn't .15.
Class of 1980
I had a 2.4 GPA but thanks to the PSAT I was a NMSF
They don't even teach the proper use of apostrophes any more.
Your not kidding.
It's no big deal.
college is something everyone had to worry about once but really there are other things right now
Have to consider the bias of the source, ACT since they depend on test reliability, but that said GPA surely went up some during the pandemic just from no-fail and other policies.
GPA scores certainly can't go back down, the system just won't allow that. That keeps schools from easily returning to strict grading.
"GPA scores certainly can’t go back down, the system just won’t allow that."
Students are CUSTOMERS. And the customer is always right. This is a consequence of the conversion of academic models to business models at the behest of rich donors and conservative politicians. Let us faculty run the institutions and we will be flunking out people like crazy who earn the failing grades. We are fed up with the college students who are mainly there for partying, drinking, sex, and some anti-Semitic activism. We didn't have grade inflation until authority was taken from the faculty.
This is a consequence of the conversion of academic models to business models at the behest of rich donors and conservative politicians.
Lol
"ACT Scores Are Down. Grades Are Up. Something's Fishy."
Ya think?
Public education is a joke in the US, and the reason for grade inflation is to cover the teachers (read baby sitters) incompetence.
Grade inflation has been going on for decades.
Ask me again why I believe in defunding all public schools.
Just give everyone a college degree with a 4.0-problem solved!
Why not also a CDL, MD, and pilot license. What could go wrong?
"The analytical sample used for this study included
ACT-tested students from a state that had a contract
with ACT to test all public high school 11th graders."
Wow! An actual unbiased sample in educational research. Kudos to these researchers for doing this right.
Despite being personally involved, I kinda hope that higher ed is well along down a death spiral. Between workforce needs, employer desires, lack of funding (I can wish!), and changing student and family priorities, degree programs and institutions as we now know them might be gone in a decade.
Lumping all "higher ed" into one silly category is just silly! Are you saying that a degree in engineering is just as worthless as a degree in underwater basket-weaving?
Dude… Grades are Racist and Sexist.
Didn’t you LEARN any ‘woke’ in school or what? /s
"...increasing from 3.44 to 3.59..."
What? At my high school, most kids were struggling to make a 2.5.
"may lead them to fail to identify students who may need additional supports"
It's not at all clear to me why it's the job of higher education institutions to identify students who "may need additional supports" or, for that matter, why they would even admit students who "may need additional supports!"
They dropped the standardized test score requirement because they feared test scores were racist, but it turns out the least discriminatory part of the application is... the standardized test scores.
Without them, applications are more heavily weighted to letters of recommendation, community involvement, "enrichment" activities/trips, and the latest "academic" papers (from an academic paper mill). Nearly all of those skew the application success rate to wealthy families. An SAT/ACT test prep book costs 20 bucks.
We've been warning about grade inflation for fifty years. No one cares. Every child MUST go onto college and so the grades must be inflated. For great justice! Or whatever.
Also, we've been warning about monetary inflation for even longer. No one cares. The easy money must keep flowing so the spending must rise disproportionately to the tax revenues. Borrow, borrow, borrow!
The students are worse off, the American people are worse off, and the solution to both problems is to apparently hold an election with the two worst candidates ever. Again. And again. Third presidential election in a row with literally the two worst candidates. And not even a the promise of a reach around. Sigh.