Fact Check

Does a Student Whose Roommate Commits Suicide Receive a 4.0 GPA?

There are a variety of rumors surrounding higher education bereavement policies that affect students' grades.

by David Mikkelson, Published Oct. 7, 2001


Computer Keyboard, Computer, Hardware

Image courtesy of Flickr Creative Commons/Chris Khamken, CC BY-NC 2.0


Claim:
A standard college regulation specifies that a student whose roommate commits suicide automatically receives a 4.0 grade point average for the current school term.
Rating:
False

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Variations:

Origins:   Although many schools will offer some sort of bereavement consideration under exceptional circumstances, no college or university in the United States has a policy awarding a 4.0 average (or anything else) to a student whose roommate dies. This rumor (or at least its widespread distribution) appears to be of fairly recent origin, dating from approximately the mid-1970s. It most likely started out as an expression of the pressures students feel to achieve good grades in the form of a morbid joke (i.e., "Even if the pressures of school cause some people to off themselves, there's no reason we can't profit by it!"), and the joke became a legend when it was spread as true by credulous students, picking up variations along the way. A similar theme of suicide (and student grade consideration for witnessing it) can be found in the pencil suicide legend.

Sightings:

Additional information:

    Hollywood Discovers an Apocryphal Legend Hollywood Discovers an Apocryphal Legend (The Chronicle of Higher Education)


By David Mikkelson

David Mikkelson founded the site now known as snopes.com back in 1994.


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