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Reply to "Will UC schools remain test blind for upcoming admissions cycle?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Sorry, but I can't find any info on this. Have they made the decision yet?[/quote] T[b]he UC system looked into whether test scores were useful in college admissions and their own researchers found that it was the single best predictor of college performance. The same committee recommended keeping standardized tests for admissions. The UC regents then went and eliminated standardized tests for admissions. With that history, I seriously doubt UC schools will reinstate testing requirements anytime soon.[/quote][/b] This. The UC regents look incredibly foolish, especially since most colleges and universities followed them into test optional. We now know from additional research that testing DOES predict college and after college success so all of those universities and colleges are dropping test optional day by day. The problem for UC schools is that they eliminated testing so they could continue to accept minority URM, etc students who didn't have the test scores. That hasn't worked well for them. And the professors are angry. Currently the UC schools delve deep into the applications to find race issues because they aren't allowed to do it openly. Yes, it's a mess.[/quote] Totally not true! UC’s stopped considering race/ethnicity in 1996. The first entering class in 1998 were the first cohort. So it has been 26 years since UC’s stopped with affirmative action. They only stopped accepting testing since the pandemic. Tje college board did a study after years of saying test prep dues r do much. Kids who did 20 hours of free online khan had average score increases of 115 points. Now imagine how much a private Sat tutor can raise your score and/or a parent who is able to pay and drive their child to group classes or are able to sit down with their child to make sure they study for the SAT and can help them understand what they got wrong. This is why the UC’s stopped considering SAT scores. [/quote]
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