The answer is obvious. Competition for grades can compel many students to cheat: on exams, on papers, on classroom assignments - you name it. So instead of students doing the hard work necessary to educate themselves, they instead come up with schemes to scam the system, thus cheating themselves of a bona fide education, inflating grades and depriving society in general of genuinely educated citizens. If that's not defeating the academic goal of education, I don't know what is.
2007-02-25 19:31:43
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answer #1
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answered by MathBioMajor 7
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I think the curve is idiotic, as well as the idea that professors have to have a certain average. If a prof gives everyone A's and B's he gets in trouble. What if he had a good class, and they all deserved A's and B's? Universities are just big businesses now.
2007-02-26 03:29:53
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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those student who gets lower grades in subjects,they will not get any jobs ,because their CGPA/OGPA is not according to eligbility criterion.moreover,there is no failing or improvement in this system ,so that student can improve.
so, the end result is very poor........
2007-02-26 03:08:35
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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