Unfairness in access to higher education: a 11 year comparison of grade inflation by private and public secondary schools in Portugal.
Date
2014
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English
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Abstract
Fairness in access to HE is unarguably a subject of paramount importance.
Wherever a student’s secondary school scores are relevant for access to HE, grade inflation
practices may jeopardize fair access. Pressures for high grading are common in the context
of educational consumerism and competition between schools and students. However, they
are not equally distributed across different types of schools, given that they have distinct
relationships with the State and the market, and work with distinct populations. Specifi-
cally, the schools that are more subject to market pressures (namely private schools) are, in
principle at least, the ones with more incentives to inflate their students’ grades. This paper
presents an empirical study based on a large, 11 years database on scores in upper sec-
ondary education in Portugal, probing for systematic differences in grade inflation prac-
tices by four types of schools: public schools, government-dependent private schools,
independent (fee-paying) private schools, and specially funded public schools in disad-
vantaged areas (TEIP schools). More than 3 million valid cases were analysed. Our results
clearly show that independent private schools inflate their students’ scores when compared
to the other types of schools. They also show that this discrepancy is higher where scores
matter most in competition for HE access. This means that—usually wealthier—students
from private independent schools benefit from an unfair advantage in the competition for
Keywords
Access to HE, Grade inflation, Public and private secondary schooling, Educational consumerism
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Journal article
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Citation
Nata, G., Pereira, M.J., & Neves, T. (2014). Unfairness in access to higher education: a 11 year comparison of grade inflation by private and public secondary schools in Portugal. Higher Education, 1, 1-24. doi: 10.1007/s10734-014-9748-7. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11328/762.
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Open Access