Harvard Faculty Votes to Cap A Grades at 20% to Curb Inflation
Harvard Faculty Votes to Cap A Grades at 20%

Harvard College will limit the number of students who can receive A grades, as faculty voted to impose a roughly 20% cap on top grades in an effort to curb decades of grade inflation. The mandatory cap at one of America's most prestigious colleges will go into effect in the fall of 2027.

New Grading Formula

Under an agreed "20 plus four" formula, the number of A grades awarded to a class of 100 undergraduates will be limited to 24 students. The move follows an October 2025 report sent to faculty and Harvard College students, which warned that the college's evaluation system was "failing to perform the key functions of grading."

Report Findings

The 25-page report found that more than 60% of grades awarded to Harvard undergraduates are As, compared with only a quarter of grades two decades ago. It concluded that the grading system was "damaging the academic culture of the College."

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Amanda Claybaugh, dean of undergraduate education, said that A grade inflation necessitated reforms to "restore the integrity of our grading and return the academic culture of the College to what it was in the recent past."

Faculty Vote

Harvard's faculty voted 458 to 201 to pass the first of three proposals limiting top grades, and a second to use average percentile rankings, rather than GPA, to assign internal awards and honors. A third proposal, which would have allowed courses to petition to opt out of the A cap if they were graded as unsatisfactory, satisfactory and satisfactory-plus, was rejected.

Student and Faculty Opposition

The effort to winnow out exceptional students from the merely competent was broadly opposed by the student body. Nearly 85% of student respondents to a February survey said they disapproved of the proposals. Some members of the Harvard faculty also argued that the grade-capping could heighten competition, discourage intellectual risk-taking, and infringe on their autonomy.

In a statement to the Harvard Crimson, Claybaugh called the vote an "important step" toward repairing Harvard's grading system. She added that the decision "will, I believe, strengthen the academic culture of Harvard; it will also, I hope, encourage other institutions to confront similar questions with the same level of rigor and courage."

Restoring Value of a Harvard Transcript

The subcommittee that drafted the proposals also said the A grade cap would restore the value of a Harvard transcript, or official academic record. "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," they wrote. "An A will once again be what Harvard's guidelines have long said it is: a mark of extraordinary distinction."

The Guardian has contacted Harvard for further comment.

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