His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the "quantity" group: fifty pound of pots rated an "A", forty pounds a "B", and so on.
This sounds like an awfully easy system to game in any case. One can simply make a single pot out of over fifty pounds of clay.
Of course, it probably won't bake very well, even putting aside the fact that it'll probably be a poor piece of handiwork, but quality is explicitly a non-issue.
I don't think fifty pounds of clay would fit on a normal potter's wheel. One pound of clay is enough to make a mug - a big mug, if you know what you're doing; one with really thick walls if you don't. But you could make ten five-pound bowls. (I say bowls because they're easy to get by accident if you're trying for cylinders.)
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/08/quantity-always-trumps-quality.html
For some reason it just seems we in particular could learn something from this anecdote.
Iterate more. The practice effect is your friend as is mining out positive outliers in really huge sets. I wanted to also mention something about using going meta as a way to procrastinate but I feared I would summon a Newsome.
Edit: This has been mentioned before. I think it is good to remind people of it. Desrtopa writes:
It is therefore best to assume this is a parable.