When Lily was thirteen, she fell in love with human anatomy. While other kids played video games, she spent her time poring over bone density and blood vessels, envisioning the day she’d put on a white coat. On her first day at Penn, Career Services gave her cautionary advice. GPA is everything for residency. Molecular biology is a safer course load. Four years later, after slogging through organic chemistry, Lily is taking her first anatomy class. She is a senior.
Engineering Junior Viktor chose computer science because he enjoyed building things. But early on, he noticed something strange. Classrooms were half-empty. Friends shrugged off any content that wouldn’t appear on the midterm. The real so-called ‘success’ existed outside the classroom: LeetCode, GitHub portfolios, internships, and technical interview drills.
As course selection for the spring semester returns, Lily and Viktor joined thousands of Penn students and me in a ritual that now feels less like planning an education and more like risk management. We open PennCourseReview and scan for two numbers: difficulty and workload. Anything above a 3.0 fades into the background until our final primary cart feels more like damage control than discovery.
It leaves me with a sticky sense of unease as I think of the bright-eyed girl who once arrived on campus, with the kind of idealism only an eighteen-year-old can summon. I wanted to be challenged, to learn anything and everything under the sun. Then I watched artificial intelligence slowly swallow skills I had once taken pride in. It wasn’t just coding; it was creating writing, music, and art. So I clung to the metric I could still control: my GPA. If that number stayed high, surely I was still capable? Capable enough to bypass the first filtering round and shift my attention to the next checkpoints: building projects, mass-applying to internships, and chasing club leadership positions.
In a recent DP column, Dr. Daniel Hopkins proposed imposing mandatory grade deflation, arguing that inflated marks obscure real distinctions, weakening Penn’s reputation for rigor in the eyes of employers and graduate schools. Crucially, he believes that tightened grading would force employers to take transcripts seriously again, thereby alleviating the student pressure to chase endless external signals. His concerns echo larger national conversations, including recent moves at Harvard University to reconsider stricter grading practices.
I don’t disagree with the diagnosis, but as a student, I do question the proposed cure. Both Harvard and Professor Hopkins assume that if grades were tighter, the employer market would return to treating transcripts as its primary measure of talent. But the market is not waiting for universities to get tougher; it is simply looking elsewhere. According to the 2026 Job Outlook survey, nearly 70% of employers now prioritize skills-based hiring, with a focus on “experiential learning and/or work during college.” In every internship application I write, it feels overwhelmingly clear that, beyond my score, they are identifying experiences outside the classroom: prior internships, clubs, and personal projects. Beyond acting as an initial filter, the GPA has lost its credibility for reasons deeper than grade inflation. The world now rewards agency, and being merely a passive student is not enough. All this, coupled with recruiting that now begins as early as sophomore year, and the continual fears of AI industry disruptions, has created a student culture of chronic self-doubt and an employment culture that will not revert to valuing transcripts simply because grading gets harsher.
The bigger question, then, is not how to preserve old academic standards, but how to allow academia to adapt without surrendering its core values. Rather than blaming students for chasing security with a safer course load, we should eliminate the GPA penalty for curiosity. What students need now is the freedom to experiment with ideas and disciplines without the looming threat of a professor who only allots a fixed quota of A’s, or assessment questions designed to trap students rather than teach. We should give them space to love learning without forcing them to choose between intellectual risk and professional survival.
Some of my most formative classes have been so-called “easy-As,” where grades reflected attendance, preparation, and active discussion rather than high-stakes competition. And yet, their demand to think publicly, connect ideas across readings, and engage actively pushed me to connect ideas in new, unique interdisciplinary ways. These were ideas that would have never happened in the courses while I sat in a dark room drenched in fluorescent light, trying to outsmart a midterm designed to trick me. Courses that prioritize rigor through aspects like reflection, participation, and synthesis offer a different and yet equally rewarding form of intellectual labor.
None of this is to serve as an argument against rigor, and I do still believe that conceptually “hard” classes are important to build grit. But true discipline in learning should emerge from depth and genuine engagement, not from fear of a grade. As more students grow dependent on AI to complete their assignments, academia must evolve to respond by rewarding interdisciplinary courses and original thoughts. Only then can we reinflate the spirit of learning and protect what makes the university classroom a place worth returning to.
DIYA CHOKSEY is a College sophomore studying cognitive science from Mumbai, India. Her email is dchoksey@sas.upenn.edu.