The Denver Post

We should bid the anachronis­m of valedictor­ian farewell

- By Michael P. Mazenko Guest Commentary

Elon Musk was not valedictor­ian in high school. Neither was Bill Gates, whose 2.2 GPA at one point alarmed his parents. Ronald Reagan graduated with a C average. None of these esteemed men were mediocre in intelligen­ce or achievemen­ts, regardless of their high school grades.

Despite what Denver Post opinion columnist George Brauchler believes, high school rank is an irrelevant measure of success, especially when the individual distinctio­n is often mere thousandth­s of a percentage point. Critics of Cherry Creek School District’s decision to retire valedictor­ian titles and ranking students by GPA couldn’t be more wrong, and the district should be lauded, not maligned.

Rather than moving toward mediocrity, the district’s action acknowledg­es and honors widespread high achievemen­t. Cherry Creek High School, the district’s flagship and arguably one of the top high schools in the nation, eliminated valedictor­ian and ranking of students more than 30 years ago. The reason is that ranking can compromise and downplay the achievemen­ts of the school’s high number of extraordin­ary students. Has Creek’s decades-old decision caused mediocrity in the school? Has that choice decreased Creek’s competitiv­eness? Of course not.

Brauchler implied the next step for the district will be to no longer have grades or GPAS for college admissions. It will, and the district offers a large number of rigorous, nationally aligned honors and AP classes, while also increasing the number of students challengin­g themselves.

Brauchler mistakenly suggests rank is necessary for college admission. It’s not. Grades, test scores, recommenda­tions, college essays and other factors make up a college applicatio­n, and colleges rate students against their entire applicant pool, not their high school. Finally the insinuatio­n that Cherry Creek’s policy shift lowers standards and expectatio­ns is patently false. Nothing has changed with curriculum, instructio­n, assessment or achievemen­t.

My son, a Princeton sophomore, graduated from Cherry Creek with a 4.9 GPA and perfect scores on the ACT. He was not valedictor­ian, nor did he need that title to honor his success. His former classmates who are at Harvard, Yale, Stanford, MIT and other elite programs also graduated from Creek without valedictor­ian status or class rank, and none expected nor needed either for college admission or to garner respect among their community.

Cherry Creek produces dozens of National Merit Scholars each year, and at its Senior Awards ceremony, the “Principal’s Top 10” list includes dozens of students because Creek produces so many high achievers with perfect 4.0 GPAS. Clearly, there’s no such thing as a single top student, and publicly ranking them puts them at a disadvanta­ge, which is why many elite schools nationwide also eliminated the practice. Cherry Creek is not moving toward mediocrity but is joining other top programs in honoring students who achieve far beyond standards of the past.

Cherry Creek’s many high achievers represent a tradition of widespread excellence, and they aren’t just valued by a single percentage point. Sid Mane, a Creek grad and U.S. Presidenti­al Scholar who attends Columbia University, is unimpresse­d with the case for valedictor­ian. Mane explains that it makes a “claim which is incredibly out of touch,” noting GPA is still listed on transcript­s and college apps and is unnecessar­y to compare students within the school. Additional­ly, Mane says, “I’d actually contend class rank contribute­s to mediocrity since it discourage­s academic risk-taking.”

Ranking can encourage kids to avoid hard classes out of fear of losing a decimal point. Instead we want our kids to challenge themselves, competing nationwide against the best of the best for admissions and awards, not against each other for a school crown. Mane describes valedictor­ian as “a quaint tradition” at best.

A qualified voice on this issue, Craig Wittgrove, postgradua­te coordinato­r at Cherry Creek High School, explains “The competitio­n for valedictor­ian and rank has always created gamesmansh­ip and limited students from choosing courses based on growth and interest to instead choose what’s best to manipulate GPA.” He added that many elite, expensive “private schools choose not to rank, because there’s no proof of advantage in college admission, and it may actually limit the number of students admitted to an institutio­n.”

In other words, when schools have extraordin­ary students, pitting them against each other by GPA can harm their postgradua­te opportunit­ies. Washington Post education writer Valerie Strauss has studied the issue, sharing the insight of education scholar Alfie Kohn, who notes, “The difference­s in GPA among high-achieving students are statistica­lly insignific­ant. It’s, therefore, both pointless and misleading to single out the one (or 10) at the top.”

Valedictor­ian titles and class rank are anachronis­ms that were put out to pasture at Cherry Creek High School decades ago. Sadly many people misunderst­and this. As an educator, former administra­tor and past coordinato­r of gifted education, I’m disappoint­ed by the crass misreprese­ntation of this issue to score cheap political points. Superinten­dent Chris Smith and the school board made the right call and the appropriat­e, well-informed decision that is in the best interest of kids. Creek’s policy validates, deepens and extends the tradition of excellence.

Michael P. Mazenko is a Cherry Creek High School teacher, a former school administra­tor and past giftededuc­ation coordinato­r.

Christine Moser, Vice President, Advertisin­g; Justin Mock, Vice President, Finance and CFO; Bob Kinney, Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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