Shadow Grading Policy

The shadow grading policy for first-year students was voted by Academic Council on December 11, 2013. The policy would be in effect for a period of six years commencing in Fall 2014. The Committee on Curriculum & Academic Policy (CCAP) would be responsible for monitoring the effects of this policy and will make regular reports to Academic Council assessing its impacts. After the six year period the policy would be evaluated and Academic Council would vote to make the policy permanent or discontinue it.

This policy was made permanent effective Fall 2020.

Students in the first semester of their first year will be graded P/NP (Pass/No Pass) in all of their classes. They will also, however, be given a report of the letter grades that they would have received (“shadow grades”), which will not appear on their official transcripts. Following our current practice, a grade of D or above is a passing grade.

This policy provides first-year students with the opportunity to learn about the standards for academic achievement at Wellesley and to assess the quality of their work in relation to these standards. It further enables them to use their first semester to refocus attention from grades to intellectual engagement and inspiration and to learn how to grow as a learner in college.

How Shadow Grading Works

First semester students will be "graded as usual" in their classes, and the faculty will submit those grades to the registrar in the usual way. The registrar will retain those grades for internal use only and will not release those grades outside the College. Official student transcripts will specifically note that all grades in the first semester are mandatory P/NP.

For the purposes of the College’s grading policy, the average grade for a class will be calculated using the shadow grades submitted for first-year students.

In courses that have grading basis Mandatory Credit/Non-Credit (CR/NCR) for all enrolled students, first semester students will receive grades of Pass/No-Pass (P/NP) only and will not be given shadow letter grades.

Initially shadow grading was also applied to first-year students enrolled in first-year writing courses in both the Fall and the Spring semester. Beginning Spring 2018, first-year writing courses taken in the spring semester will no longer be shadow graded.

FAQ

For a period of six years beginning in the fall of 2014, students in the first semester of their first year will be graded Pass/No Pass in all of their classes. They will also, however, be given a report of the letter grades that they would have received (‘shadow grades’), which will not appear on their official transcripts. A grade of D or above is a passing grade.

First semester students will be ‘graded as usual’ in their classes, and faculty will submit these grades to the registrar. The registrar will retain these grades for internal use only and will not release them outside of the College. Official student transcripts will specifically note that all grades in the first semester are mandatory Pass/No Pass.

Refocus attention from grades to intellectual engagement. The transition to college marks a time when students can broaden their definition of academic success to include intellectual engagement, inspiration, and risk-taking; experience the joy of discovery and challenging oneself; and forge meaningful intellectual relationships with faculty. Wellesley is committed to providing the framework for students to make such a transition, and shadow grades provide a clear statement that college is different from high school.

Commitment to the core elements of a liberal education. The strength of a liberal arts education is in the development of intellectual skills and habits that allow students to engage a wide-ranging curriculum while they are here and a complicated and rapidly changing world when they leave. Shadow grading allows students and their teachers to focus on progress toward those goals and not just on how many of them are met by semester's end.

Manage time and balance commitments. Moving from the highly structured and supervised environment of high school to the more independent and self-managed work environment at college is challenging for most new students. Shadow grading first semester will better enable first-year students to focus on adjusting to their new environment, making thoughtful decisions, and creating a complementary balance within their academic commitments and social activities.

Grades can provide meaningful information to students about their academic performance. What kind of feedback will students receive in their courses that are shadow graded?

Although first semester grades will not be recorded on official transcripts, first semester student work will, in most courses, be graded. These shadow grades will provide first-year students with the opportunity to learn about the standards for academic achievement at Wellesley and to assess the quality of their work in relation to those standards. In addition, first year students will benefit from commentary on their oral and written work, meetings with faculty in office hours, and other forms of assessment regularly associated with the range of courses in the liberal arts.

No.

No. First semester grades will not be used to calculate a student's GPA.

Grades of D or above will appear as “P” (passing) on the official transcript; grades of F will appear as “NP” (not passing).

No. Only courses taken during a First-Year student's first semester at Wellesley will be shadow graded.

Because first semester grades are useful to the advising process, they will be shared with the Dean of First Year Students and first year advisors.

In letter-graded courses, all students will receive letter grades at the end of the semester. For first year students in the fall semester, these letter grades will not appear on their official transcripts; instead they will be recorded as P (if D or above) or NP (if the grade is an F). For all other students, letter grades will appear on their transcripts as usual.

In mandatory credit/no credit courses, first year students in the fall semester will receive a grade of P (if the final grade is D or above) or NP (if the grade is an F). All other students will receive a grade of MCR (if the final grade is C or above) or MNCR (if the final grade is C- or below).

A Cover Letter from the Provost's Office explaining Wellesley’s grading policies accompanies every transcript sent out by the Registrar. We know that other colleges and universities with similar first semester grading policies have sent generations of students to graduate and medical schools and that they are rarely asked by these schools to report first semester grades. We expect Wellesley students will continue to be successful in gaining admission to graduate and professional programs and will continue to communicate clearly our policy not to include first semester grades on the official College transcript.

Yes.

Although Wellesley will never release first year grades, first semester grades as part of a student’s official transcript, there are two situations in which a student may petition the Dean of First Year Students to make these grades known to external audiences:

  1. In cases where a student is applying for or renewing scholarship assistance from an organization that requires first year, first semester grade reports, the Dean may notify the organization that the student has met the GPA standard required in order to continue to receive scholarship assistance. In cases where organizations require specific course grades, the student may petition the Dean to make their first semester, first year grades known to the schools to the funding organization. A letter from the scholarship granting organization must state that the application cannot be considered without actual grades.
  2. In cases where a student is applying to transfer from Wellesley during their second semester at the College (and thus would not yet have grades recorded on their official transcript), the student may petition the Dean to make their first semester, first year grades known to the schools to which she is applying. Once grades from the spring term or additional semesters have been added to the transcript, the shadow grades will not be released.

Wellesley’s Committee on Curriculum and Academic Policy (CCAP) is responsible for monitoring the effects of the shadow grading policy and will make regular reports to faculty, students and staff assessing its impacts. This assessment will include survey and interview data from both students and faculty, analyses of first semester enrollment patterns, as well as other small-scale and discipline-specific studies.