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- 约9.18千字
- 约 3页
- 2020-04-12 发布于江苏
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Letter to a B student
Your final grade for the course is B. A respectable grade. Far superior to the Gentlemans C
that served as the norm a couple of generations ago. But in those days As were rare: only two out
of twenty-five, as I recall. Whatever our norm is, it has shifted upward, with the result that you are
probably disappointed at not doing better. Im certain that nothing I can say will remove that
feeling of disappointment, particularly in a climate where grades determine eligibility for graduate
school and special programs.
Disappointment. Its the stuff bad dreams are made of: dreams of failure, inadequacy, loss of
position and good repute. The essence of success is that theres never enough of it to go round in a
zero-sum game where one persons winning must be offset by anothers losing, one persons joy
offset by anothers disappointment. Youve grown up in a society where winning is not the most
important thing — its the only thing. To lose, to fail, to go under, to go broke — these are deadly
sins in a world where prosperity in the present is seen as a sure sign of salvation in the future. In a
different society, your disappointment might be something you could shrug away. But not in ours.
My purpose in writing you is to put your disappointment in perspective by considering
exactly what your grade means and doesnt mean. I do not propose to argue here that grades are
unimportant. Rather, I hope to show you that your grade, taken at face value, is apt to be
dangerously misleading, both to you and to others.
As a symbol on your college transcript, your grade simply means that you have successfully
completed a specific course of study, doing so at a certain level of proficiency. The level of your
proficiency has been determined by your performance of rather conventional tasks: taking tests,
writing papers and reports, and so forth. Your performance is generally assumed to corre
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