• Is a C+ worth $1,300,000?

    Date: 02.18.13 | by Judge Tom.

    Graduate student, Megan Thode, thinks so. In the fall of 2009 Megan was a student at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania.  In one of her classes she received a C+ grade which she claims was unfair and affected her future earnings.

    Megan was taking a fieldwork class that was required to move on to the next level. Her goal was to earn a masters in counseling in order to become a professional therapist. However, 25% of the grade for this class was based on classroom participation. Her professor reported that Megan’s outbursts in class, including swearing and crying, contributed to her getting a zero for this part of the grade. Consequently, she received a C+ for the class which kept her out of the counseling program. Instead, Megan graduated with a masters in human development and works as a drug and alcohol counselor.

    Megan Thode photo from NPR.org

    Megan Thode photo from NPR.org

    Still brooding over her C+ grade, she filed a lawsuit against the University and her professor asking for $1.3 million in damages and a grade change. A judge is hearing the case with a decision expected in February or March, 2013.

    Her professor explained in her testimony that Megan “received the grade she earned.” Megan claims that since she was an activist for LGBT rights at school, her professor held this against her as reflected in the grade she got for the class. Her professor denies this allegation.

    We don’t know where the $1.3 million figure comes from, but we doubt as a recent graduate (2009 or 2010) that her earnings over two or three years would have been even close to this. It may be future earnings she may have earned had she been allowed to obtain her counseling degree. Guess we’ll have to wait for the judge’s ruling. What do you think?

    Update:  On February 14, 2013, Judge Emil Giordano decided that the university didn’t breach any contract with Megan or sexually discriminate against her. Her lawsuit was dismissed. It’s rare that a court gets involved in academic decisions. The Supreme Court has commented that it has no interest in micro-managing the country’s education system.

     

     

    Judge Tom

    This post was written by Judge Tom. Judge Tom is the founder and moderator of AsktheJudge.info. He is a retired juvenile judge and spent 23 years on the bench. He has written several books for lawyers and judges as well as teens and parents including the recently published 'Teen Cyberbullying Investigated' (Free Spirit Publishing). When he's not answering teens' questions, Judge Tom can be found hiking, traveling and reading.

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