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Reply to "My daughter bombed her ACT - move on to SAT? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I posted earlier recommending a tutor. The thing is, a tutor is necessary to figure out the strategies and to go over the wrong answers her so she can see what she did wrong. The tutor will provide your daughter with strategies on how to approach certain questions, and what to look for. My DS had a 33 in his mock tests as a rising junior. After a few months of tutoring, he took the test in February and scored a 35. The tutor will help your DD improve her score significantly, especially the lower scores. It is a worthwhile investment. [/quote] This is a great example illustrating why the ACT and SAT are of limited value for colleges and why the Harvard lawsuit will fail.[/quote] Exactly. High scores have reduced value because they can be bought and/or made into an extracurricular activity.[/quote] +1 That is why schools with holistic admissions can see who probably aid for their higher test scores. [/quote] Those of you referring to "paying for" scores-- do you mean, paying for prep courses? [/quote] I'll say "yes", and I'll plead guilty to doing it for my own kids. What I won't do is claim that they are somehow being victimized because DD's 1570 doesn't impress Harvard.[/quote] Harvard clearly discriminated. A judge has ordered the release of its admission data. I won't tell my kids they are being victimized either but have to remind them to work extra hard to level the "holistic" bias against them.[/quote] If you are telling them to work extra hard to improve their 1570 to a 1600 you are wasting their time. It is a distinction without a difference. Crying bias won't change that.[/quote]
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