| Half the professors at universities are unique learners who may have qualified for accommodations if they were in school today. Professors don't care if students need more time. Many students with special needs are extremely bright. My gifted DC with ASD and ADHD has a verbal IQ of 150. DC needs more time to take in information, organize thoughts, and write due to fine motor problems and problems with executive function. BTW not providing reasonable accommodations to students who demonstrate a need for them can show what they know and participate meaningfully in school with their peers is considered discriminatory by federal law. |
everybody has heard of 2e. it’s a label given to parents to help them deal with their disappointment with their kids. |
Your child is not as smart as you believe he is. He’s a 33 ACT kid. He only got into a top 20 college because he got time and a half. |
"To show what they know" not "can show". PP |
And yet they still ended up as college professors. They did not need accommodations to get where they were meant to be. It’s interesting that you think your child cannot and needs help. Maybe he doesn’t? |
| Truth is, more time on a (proctored, closed book) standardized test doesn’t make you smarter or enable you to know more. It just gives people a chance to show what they already know/can do. |
Back then you could get into your state school with a C average and middling scores. There was probably more neurodiversity back then in top schools than there is now. It would be nice if my DC didn't need the extra supports but that is not the case for all tasks. |
Thank you for this. Unfortunately, it falls on deaf ears. For those of us with stronger understanding, it's just so obvious. It's the average NT people like OP who just don't have the intellect to understand these things. |
No way. Extra time would help everyone. Timed tests are much more stressful and require you to think quickly in less than ideal ways. I guarantee you that I would absolutely score higher if I had extra time. |
Brilliant idea. But what will prevent an applicant to lie on the application, after taking extra time on the standardized test? After all, we now have proof that some parents bribed to get athletic admissions to their non-athlete kids into elite colleges. We now have proof some parents bribe to have extra time given to their kids for standardized testing, or to have their kids' answers corrected before submitting the answer sheet, or even to have someone else take the test for their kids. In many of these cases the kids are reluctant, if not willing, participants in the fraud. A better solution is for College Board and ACT organization to designate "standard time" next to the score of students who did not take extra time. I am sure, no one will object to a truthful comment to appear next to the score of someone else's kid. After all, the comment is true. |
I'm guessing this is not the case. Students with learning differences were generally not adequately supported in their younger years and I'm sure many of them just didn't make it to college. Luckily, that was a time when it was a lot easier to earn an ok living without a college education. |
Talk about delusional. You’re cheating the system. Time and half would allow most 30+ ACT kids to score a perfect score. LOL |
But the hard feelings here aren’t: NT v SN It’s NT v abusers of SN designations That’s the “competition” that bugs us. It’s alll competition. I can get over that simple fact, but not happy with those who don’t need it abusing the system. I think some of us feel quite extreme about it, and extreme enough to say “you now what? Let’s truly standardize it, and if ADD takes a point hit, it might be worth it. They’ll turn out fine.” |
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Can we see the bell curve of ACT scores by kids taking extra time?
My hunch is the statistics will show a huge bubble on the right hand side of the curve. If there is a huge number of kids getting extra time and scoring above 30 and they showed these statistics—nail in the coffin for this scam. |
+1 I don’t think parents no realize how easy the ACT is. It’s a joke. If you have extra time you better be scoring a 34-36. This is what’s so free starting for other kids. They have to think so fast they make careless mistakes and don’t have time to check their work. |