Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: According to DCUM, low-income brilliant children don't exist.
They exist, they're just very rare.
All the more reason to take simple steps, like looking at low-income students’ SAT scores, to see if their GPAs give us an incomplete picture of their talent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: According to DCUM, low-income brilliant children don't exist.
They exist, they're just very rare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: According to DCUM, low-income brilliant children don't exist.
They exist, they're just very rare.
So, to be precise, all poors are stupid according to DCUM.
Please explain how the top specialized test-in high schools in NYC were up to 59% low-income students before the DeBlasio changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2 points that haven’t been mentioned.
On, the SAT and AC are very preppable with minimal resources. My DD got an 8 point bump in science reasoning by working through the $20 For The Love of Science ACT prep book that was recommended on Amazon. 26 to 34. She just hadn’t understood what the section was testing. Nothing else moved more than a point, and she went from a 33 to a 35 total. You don’t need expensive prep. You need the self discipline to work through a paperback prep book and/or Khan Academy.
I can’t link to an app on my iPhone, but there is an interesting discussion on the applying to college subreddit about AOs who have told his years class that they will be relying heavily on APs scores, since SATs are out and It’s hard to determine what junior grades mean with so many kid in DL and a lot of cheating. They are using APs to validate junior year grades. My kid has 5 4s/5s banked, so her As from 10th and 11th are validated.
I found this really interesting. And it makes sense.
Of course, it’s only as reliable as any other info from Reddit, which is to say, who knows?
BTW, my kid is t apply to UCs.
My DC’s private school doesn’t have AP classes and GPAs are a lot lower than you see in public schools that weight grades. I really believe this harmed their college admissions during the Covid test optional period (class of 2022).
Anonymous wrote:2 points that haven’t been mentioned.
On, the SAT and AC are very preppable with minimal resources. My DD got an 8 point bump in science reasoning by working through the $20 For The Love of Science ACT prep book that was recommended on Amazon. 26 to 34. She just hadn’t understood what the section was testing. Nothing else moved more than a point, and she went from a 33 to a 35 total. You don’t need expensive prep. You need the self discipline to work through a paperback prep book and/or Khan Academy.
I can’t link to an app on my iPhone, but there is an interesting discussion on the applying to college subreddit about AOs who have told his years class that they will be relying heavily on APs scores, since SATs are out and It’s hard to determine what junior grades mean with so many kid in DL and a lot of cheating. They are using APs to validate junior year grades. My kid has 5 4s/5s banked, so her As from 10th and 11th are validated.
I found this really interesting. And it makes sense.
Of course, it’s only as reliable as any other info from Reddit, which is to say, who knows?
BTW, my kid is t apply to UCs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: According to DCUM, low-income brilliant children don't exist.
They exist, they're just very rare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's fantastic. Study after study after study has confirmed the high correlation between family income and parental education and SAT and ACT scores. Generally speaking, high scores were born on third base. It doesn't make them any smarter.
There's vastly more SAT/ACT variance in similar income groups than between them. The UC system actually did the research and determined that standardized tests were the [b]single best predictor of college success. The UC system isn't removing standardized tests because they don't work; they're removing them because they do.
This is flatly wrong. Read p.25 of the report. HSGPA alone predicts 12% of variance in freshman gpa, SAT only models predict 10%. This is exactly consistent with the College Board’s research. What the report said was the SAT scores plus HSGPA is the best predictor, again consistent with the College Board’s research.
https://senate.universityofcalifornia.edu/_files/committees/sttf/sttf-report.pdf#page65
Thanks, you’re right. Interesting that this result differs from what the College Board reports.
Page 25 is simply talking about table 3.1 and the slightly counterintuitive finding that test scores worked better than grades for underrepresented students. Look at the table (3.1) they're referencing. For all students, test scores explain 21% of the variance in grades and HS GPA explain 16%. I agree that both together are superior, as expected.
Anonymous wrote: According to DCUM, low-income brilliant children don't exist.
Anonymous wrote:I also believe this will have a domino effect.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaeltnietzel/2021/11/19/university-of-california-reaches-final-decision-no-more-standardized-admission-testing/?sh=624158562ec5
After years of debate and study, the University of California (UC) has reached a final decision to end the use of standardized admissions tests such as the ACT and SAT.
But, because of UC’s reputation and size, its decision to stop using the tests and to give up for now on finding any alternatives to them is expected to lead other institutions to the same conclusion, continuing the anti-test movement that’s become a national trend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's fantastic. Study after study after study has confirmed the high correlation between family income and parental education and SAT and ACT scores. Generally speaking, high scores were born on third base. It doesn't make them any smarter.
There's vastly more SAT/ACT variance in similar income groups than between them. The UC system actually did the research and determined that standardized tests were the [b]single best predictor of college success. The UC system isn't removing standardized tests because they don't work; they're removing them because they do.
This is flatly wrong. Read p.25 of the report. HSGPA alone predicts 12% of variance in freshman gpa, SAT only models predict 10%. This is exactly consistent with the College Board’s research. What the report said was the SAT scores plus HSGPA is the best predictor, again consistent with the College Board’s research.
https://senate.universityofcalifornia.edu/_files/committees/sttf/sttf-report.pdf#page65