NEW YORK – Harvard announced Wednesday (Thursday, Manila time) it will limit how many top marks professors can give undergraduate students, moving to fight grade inflation at one of America’s most storied universities.
Grade inflation is a problem across American higher education, amid worries that an A, meant to reward outstanding work, loses meaning if most students get one as a matter of course.
With this kind of inflation, A grades say less to employers and graduate school admissions officers as indicators that a student is an appealing prospect.
The new grading system — voted on by professors in recent days and announced Wednesday — works like this: in a given course a teacher can award an A to no more than 20 percent of the students, with an allowance for up to four extra A’s.
There is no limit to scores of A minus or lower in the new system, which is scheduled to take effect in the academic year starting in the autumn of 2027, Harvard said.
Faculty members voted 458 to 201 to use the new grading scheme.
In the 2024-2025 academic year about two thirds of the grades handed out to undergraduates at Harvard were A’s, according to the student handbook.
This new system will bring that ratio down to 2010 levels, when a third of grades were A’s, the Harvard Gazette student newspaper reported.
Faculty members released a statement welcoming the change.
“This matters for our students above all. A Harvard A grade will now tell them, as well as employers and graduate schools, something real about what a student has achieved,” the statement said.
But students do not like the idea, with 85 percent saying they oppose the new system in a poll carried out in February, according to the newspaper.
“This is a consequential vote,” said Amanda Claybaugh, the dean of undergraduate education.






