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Posted: Fri May 31, 2013 6:10 pm
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I believe a lot of professors put that they have somewhere around a 3% "participation" part of the grade. But it comes down to each professor. So that's the grade bump they can give.ajax adonis wrote:Tried looking this up in some threads, but didn't really get any definite answers.
I wanted to ask if professors usually have the discretion to give a half grade bump (B to B+) for things like participation. Is this true?
ajax adonis wrote:Yeah, I was wondering if profs could see what grades students got and then decide whom to give the grade bump to.
Sadly, if profs can grade bump, then I think this vindicates the gunners =/ Wish I knew this in some of my classes where I was sometimes too cool for school.
I have no idea how this actually works, but presumably if your participation grade increases your overall course grade, yes, this might move you higher in the curve than someone who got a higher exam grade than you did. But it's not that the other grade is lowered - it's more that, taking into account BOTH participation and the exam, the person who got the bump performed better in the class (according to the prof and the artificial requirements of the curve).notcool wrote:Wait sorry this will be a dumb question okay but if profs can grade bump some people based on participation, does that mean that the ones who DIDN'T get bumped can have their grades moved DOWN after the registrar does their "mathematical magic"?
Just to bolster this argument, I had 3 out of my 5 spring semester professors state that they would bump for active participation in their syllabuses. I've gotten no grades back yet (>_>) but one of my professors had a rigorous formula for determining who'd get a bump while the other 2 professors were just like "eh. If I feel like it..." But yeah, my understanding is that none of my professors who DIDN'T advertise it in their syllabuses provide(d) grade bumps based on participation or affection or whatever. Could be wrong of course: but that's my understanding.A. Nony Mouse wrote:I have no idea how this actually works, but presumably if your participation grade increases your overall course grade, yes, this might move you higher in the curve than someone who got a higher exam grade than you did. But it's not that the other grade is lowered - it's more that, taking into account BOTH participation and the exam, the person who got the bump performed better in the class (according to the prof and the artificial requirements of the curve).notcool wrote:Wait sorry this will be a dumb question okay but if profs can grade bump some people based on participation, does that mean that the ones who DIDN'T get bumped can have their grades moved DOWN after the registrar does their "mathematical magic"?
Some context that might help: until my 3L year, my school graded on a 100-pt scale. You also got given the 4.0 equivalent of your grades and so I think that's generally what people put on their resumes. But if you got an A, that could be anything from a 93-100 (in theory - I don't think anyone ever gave out 100). When I say that participation gave you a bump, my impression is that was 2-3 points max. So, it might take you from a 92 (A-) to a 94 (A). But it might take you from a 94 (A) to a 96 (A), so less significant. Though yes, this would presumably move you ahead of someone who had a 93 or 95 exam and no bump.
However, in terms of the curve, my school didn't have a fixed distribution of grades (where 10% get As, 15% A-, etc. etc.). Instead, it had a required median. As I understand it, you can distribute grades on a required median in a number of ways (some classes seemed to have very very few As/Cs, and a ton of Bs; some classes had a lot of As, but also a lot of Cs and fewer Bs). So whether getting moved ahead of someone with a 1-pt better exam than yours would actually bump that person down into the next grade category, I don't know, but it certainly wouldn't have to.
Really, I have no idea how much impact any given bump ever actually had on the person getting it or others in the class. Any advantage may have been totally illusory. Since our cumulative GPAs were graded on the 100-pt scale, personally I would take any bump I could get. And I figure it never hurts to make a good enough impression on a prof that they bumped you up - it helps for getting LORs for clerkship apps, or getting the prof to connect you with people, that kind of thing.* But the impact on GPA may have been kind of a wash.
*I know - GUNNER.
tl;dr - I would totally not worry about this unless your profs have specifically said in the syllabus that they will bump for participation. My impression is that it's actually very rare, that I had a weird concentration of profs who did actually care about this, and that very few people in a given class will ever actually get bumped.