This post is the first of a series on student achievement.
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) summarizes graduation rates for first-time full-time undergraduates here. Overall rates have increased from 34% to 47% between start years of 1996 and 2014-an average increase of .7% per year. Why is this?
Educated Guesses
"Why" questions are a trap, like a free trial subscription to the Wall Street Journal. See The Book of Why for an accessible discussion of the history of causal thinking and details of path-diagram method that Judea Pearl developed. One problem with finding causal explanations is that it's too easy to imagine a cause from some effect we'd like to explain. In logic this is called abductive reasoning, and historically this has led to a lot of problems, like "the barn burned down because Ahab used witchcraft." However, abduction is useful for formulating guesses about causes, as long as we're willing to be wrong about all of them. In that spirit, here are some possible reasons for the graduation rate increases that are empirically testable.
- Colleges are making it easier to graduate because:
- Requirements are more lenient
- Student support has increased
- Student population characteristics are changing in favor of those more likely to graduate
- Student-institution matching has improved
The first of these is straightforward to understand. The second suggests a "selection effect" of the type that tripped up the 1983 report A Nation at Risk (see chapter 7 of Cathy O'Neil's book). Suppose the group of students who are least likely to graduate college become discouraged over time, perhaps because of rising costs and diminishing public confidence, so on average a smaller fraction of them choose to attend college each year. That self-selection out of the applicant pools would be expected to result in higher graduation rates.
The third hypothesis is even more subtle. On average, students are applying to ever more colleges each year, casting the net more widely as it were. This suggests that the academic and financial match between students and institutions might be improving--a kind of free market hypothesis. If so, this effect might be discernible in the data as a connection between higher application rates and higher retention or graduation rates.
But let's start with the first hypothesis on the list, because there has already been some good work done to ask the question.
Grade Inflation
It is easy to see how a focus on graduation could affect grade inflation. Imagine that a college wants to increase its graduation rate. An institution under such pressure has several options at hand. It could maintain grading standards and help students via tutoring or other student-success programs. It could change who is admitted (if it is a selective school). These are costly changes to make, and any particular program may not work.
Alternatively, the college could relax its grading standards and suggest or accept that what used to be D-level work is now worth a C. Relaxing grading standards has the advantage of providing no direct cost to the university, the professor, or the student.
Recent Graduation Rates
In the figure, AppsPer is applicants per enrolled student, where higher levels mean more demand for four-year undergraduate programs at a university. Since applicants increasingly apply to more and more schools, I binned this value within each year to be consistent, using quintiles, so AppsPer 5 comprises the institutions with the largest number of applicants for each enrolled student for that year. Larger pools of applicants allow colleges to be more selective.
As expected, more selective schools have higher graduation rates across the time period. While all selectivity ranges saw increased graduation rates, this is most dramatic in the least-selective institutions. The pattern is similar if we use standardized test scores instead of applicants per student. These patterns are consistent with the idea that the first year of college is easier to pass for the least-prepared students. That can't be the whole story, but it seems likely to be part of it. And it seems likely that the grade effects found in the paper have continued, and perhaps have accelerated.
Conclusions
- Less grading rigor increases retention and graduation
- More grading rigor is associated with more learning